You have ignored or ostracized him. This often means that you and your friends will ignore the person even if they are standing right there talking.
It is not an idiom, it means your nose is itching.
idiom means expression like a page in a book
Simply its mean a bully.
I think it means that that person agrees with that others persons idiom and that it fit that question that the teacher or whoever asked that question.
This is not an idiom - it means exactly what it says. You should stay fit and healthy.
To send someone to "Coventry" is a British Idiom. It means you don't talk to them. The affect depends on the person and on how long you do this. After a while it could get a person depressed or lonely.
It's just an old saying. The saying comes from the Round Heads being sent to prison in Coventry. Their punishment, besides being imprisoned was not to be spoken to. They were given the right to roam the grounds of their prison but strict orders were given that no one was permitted to speak to them. Thus, when someone is "Sent to Coventry" it means they are being ignored. Not sure if that is correct, Coventry was a Parliament stronghold, so it would be more likely that Royalist troops would have been sent there when captured.
Check out the story "Coventry" by Robert Heinlein.
The phrase 'Sent to Coventry' is a phrase that was created by a man named Neil Coventry and has been used by a few people here and there but is not that widely known.
I don't know what you're talking about. Coventry is a city in England.
You have done something to REALLY upset them. If you do not know what you have done you need to ask one of them why they have sent you to Coventry.
Waiting for God - 1990 Sent to Coventry 4-8 is rated/received certificates of: UK:PG (video rating) (2006)
It's not really an idiom. It means "what are you thinking about."
RFP is not an idiom. It's an abbreviation.
It is not an idiom, it means your nose is itching.
It's not an idiom. It means the tip of your nostril.
idiom means expression like a page in a book