"Over the moon" is another way to say that you are very happy. The image evoked is that you are so overjoyed that you have floated off the ground and into space. Another phrase with the same meaning is "on cloud nine." yeh i am on cloud nine!!
No, it is a descriptive phrase coined in the 1950's to describe a UFO shape. A pilot described an object he saw flying overhead, and said it looked like two saucers placed together. The media coined the phrase "flying saucers" from this.
blue moon happens very rarely, so the meaning is an incident which is rare or might be impossible.
The idiom "catch the moon" means pursuing an impossible or unattainable goal, something that is beyond reach or out of grasp, like trying to catch the moon in the sky. It implies striving for something that is unlikely to be achieved.
It means: You are in the Moon. It refers to someone daydreaming. Or the English: The lights are on but no body's home. Have you got your head in the clouds?
Idioms are phrases that you can't guess what they mean just by reading them. This phrase is asking you to figure out what the actual words of the idiom would mean -- the "implied meaning" is what's not said, but meant.
It's not an idiom. It means you pick and choose what you want -- pick something out and choose it from a selection.
Tennessee Ernie Ford
No,it is not an idiom. It means exactly what it says - "if the job is going to get done" with the implied ending of "I will have to do it."
"To be" is not an idiom - it's a verb.
Opt A (Very fast)
Pest is not an idiom. It's a word.
The idiom "apple shiner" means the teacher's pet.
The meaning of the idiom in the pink of health means being in good health.
The idiom means impress someone is egg on
It's not an idiom - to cope means to deal with, or to handle
"Old hand" is an idiom meaning having lots of experience.