A food idiom for in serious trouble = in a pickle
One foot. And if you did not know that you are in serious trouble!One foot. And if you did not know that you are in serious trouble!One foot. And if you did not know that you are in serious trouble!One foot. And if you did not know that you are in serious trouble!
Can you literally be inside of a pickle?No, so it's an idiom. It means in trouble.
"Out of the woods" means "out of danger" or "out of trouble."
This isn't an idiom because you can figure out the meaning by context. If you're thinking food - you're thinking about food.
this idiom is similar to "horsing around"- causing trouble
Get real: face reality, think and act in a serious fashion
In trouble, usually yet to come. "You'll be in hot water when your parents find out" To be in hot water is to be in immediate, deep trouble, as if someone were cooking us in a pot on the stove. The person "in hot water" did a particular thing that is sure to make another person mad at him or her.
In trouble. The image is of your spouse kicking you out of the house and you have to spend the night with the dog.
serious means: to take things as if its no laughing matter like you would get serious trouble if you broke the law. Solemn means: very serious . serious means: to take things as if its no laughing matter like you would get serious trouble if you broke the law. Solemn means: very serious . serious means: to take things as if its no laughing matter like you would get serious trouble if you broke the law. Solemn means: very serious .
food
because the soviet economy was in serious trouble
They are implying that they have "killed" you - you are in big trouble with them, and they are going to make you pay for whatever you just did to them.