The idiom 'bats in the/his/her belfry' means that someone is crazy.
ex. 'I wouldn't trust what she has to say. She's got bats in the belfry.'
A belfry is an old word for what we typically call a bell tower. Both amount to the same thing: a tower or other location where you would find the building's bells. The most common way one hears the word is the idiom "Bats in the Belfry", which is an old idiom to indicate one's head is rather a mess and therefore the person is implied to be crazy (picture this; the bells start ringing, scaring the bats and causing them to panic; that bell tower is going to be quite hectic for a while).
The word "belfry" is a noun.
The word is belfry.
The address of the Belfry Branch is: 24371 U.S. Highway 119 South, Belfry, 41514 0340
You can't find Belfry because there is no Pokémon named Belfry.
An idiom is a phrase that seems to be nonsense unless you know the definition. The word band's is the possessive of the word band, meaning "belonging to the band." It is a word, not an idiom.
Pest is not an idiom. It's a word.
My Favorite IDIOM Is, When Pigs Fly.
The phone number of the Belfry Branch is: 606-353-9429.
The word that fits between beguile and belfry is "believe." This sequence forms a logical progression because belfry is related to a bell tower, and belief, beldam, and bellow all relate to the concept of sound or voice in some way.
The Devil in the Belfry was created in 1839.
Flooded Belfry was created in 1800.