Stuck in a rut is a phrase, but I am not sure if an idiom is the same thing as a phrase.
You may be thinking of a cliche and "stuck in a RUT" is a cliche. "Stuck in a road" is neither cliche nor idiom.
The term stuck up as an English idiom means conceited or arrogant. It applied to someone who is seen as aloof or haughty.
He was behind on what their doing know
Origin: Unless you can fly, something must be in contact with the road when moving on it - the rubber on the tires, the soles of the shoes, the hooves of the horse. So, when you start out on a journey overland, you are hitting the road.
"To be" is not an idiom - it's a verb.
The idiom "apple shiner" means the teacher's pet.
vocabulary of the road
The idiom "bleed like a stuck pig" refers to the fact that pigs will bleed a lot when stabbed. It originated to make a point about vulnerable people.
Fork in the road means a time when it is necessary to make a decision.
The term stuck up as an English idiom means conceited or arrogant. It applied to someone who is seen as aloof or haughty.
It means to start a journey or to leave.
If you "take to the road," then you travel along it, so this idiom means that you started a journey of some sort.
He was behind on what their doing know
A Rock stuck in the road
It was a phrase. "Hold on to your hat, there is going to be a bumpy road ahead"!
Because he was stuck to the chicken.
it got stuck on my foot...
because his dick was stuck in a chicken