Nothing. The phrase would be "out of the frying pan and into the fire," as in you have jumped out of one bad situation into an even worse one.
Teach you a lesson.It means to deflate your ego, to humble you in front of your peers.
Yes, "cut the cheese" is an idiom that is commonly used as slang for passing gas or farting in informal language.
"Cutting" a deal just means making one. You're compromising, or making an agreement. "Cut" is used in the sense of stamping out or creating.
The idiom "can't cut the mustard" means not being able to handle difficult situations.It means whatever it is is not sufficient, that more is required."Can't cut the mustard" means something doesn't meet standard expectations.
Literally it means to cut something until it falls down, like a tree, so figuratively it means to "fell" someone, usually with a sarcastic or "cutting" remark.
to suffocate the fire, Since fires needs oxygen to burn if you cut off its supply it will go out
Our teacher treats everyone the same and her classroom rules are very cut and dried.
When someone "isn't cut out for _____," then they do not have any talent for that thing whatsoever. The image is of a job as a hole, and a person being cut out to fit that hole; if you don't fit, you aren't very good at it.
cut the door
The idiom is "cut you short." That means to interrupt someone. Example: "I hate to cut you short, but I am due back at the office."
"Cut it out," means "stop it!" This is an exclamation, and almost always has an exclamation point after it. You would hear this in any situation where someone is unhappy with what is going on. If someone is bothering you, you'd say "Cut it out!" and maybe even follow that up with "or else I'm going to get even!"
Yes because you can't figure out what it means without understanding the idiom. You're not literally cutting anything with a pair of scissors, are you?