It's slang for really likes someone or something.
The idiom, "You lost your marbles," means that you've gone crazy.
No, but it's slang. An idiom is a phrase that doesn't make any sense unless you know the definition. "Stop talking crazy" means "stop speaking nonsense" or "stop speaking like a crazy person would."
Jumping off the walls means going crazy with nervous anticipation.It's usually said as bouncing off the walls.It means for a school teacher that the kids were going crazy, and the class was out of control and it was driving you mad
"To be" is not an idiom - it's a verb.
The idiom "apple shiner" means the teacher's pet.
The idiom, "You lost your marbles," means that you've gone crazy.
No, but it's slang. An idiom is a phrase that doesn't make any sense unless you know the definition. "Stop talking crazy" means "stop speaking nonsense" or "stop speaking like a crazy person would."
A level of craziness comparable to that of a bedbug.
You're out of your mind means your ideas are crazy.
working like a dog
"Out of your mind" is an idiom. It makes no sense unless you already know that it means you are behaving in a crazy manner.
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.'
It means that she is crazy- mad like a dog.
Nothing. "Loud of your mind" makes no sense as an idiom or a phrase. You should ask the person to tell you exactly what they did say and explain it to you.
crazy. In Australian idiom it means an idiot. Same as "You Dill".
stood there staring at her
It means that you are acting irrationally or acting crazy. The image is of a machine whose rocker has slipped out of the groove and is now rocking madly and damaging the rest of the machine.