It means he did not hurry. If you want to say that someone took a long time, but you don't really want to be mean, you can say "You sure took your time on that."
You can also say "He took his sweet time finishing that."
It means you stood up and started giving a speech.
This is not an idiom. It means just what it says. It is a saying that means time seems to go by more quickly when you are doing something enjoyable than it does when you are uncomfortable.
The idiom to kills/slaughter the fattened calf basically means that you will celebrate with a friend or relative that you have not seen in a very long time.
It is not an idiom, it means your nose is itching.
idiom means expression like a page in a book
It's not an idiom - it means just what it says. Something took "no" time to come about. It's an exaggeration, but the meaning is plain.
It means he did not hurry. If you want to say that someone took a long time, but you don't really want to be mean, you can say "You sure took your time on that."You can also say "He took his sweet time finishing that."
No, it means exactly what it seems to mean. You took a chance on something and accepted your consequences.
It means you stood up and started giving a speech.
The idiom "a dog's age" means a long time or a period that feels particularly long. It exaggerates the notion of time passing slowly, similar to saying "an eternity."
This isn't an idiom. It means just what it seems to mean. Something is only a matter of time - you only have to wait until it happens.
It is just an exaggerated way of saying something happens quite often - it is hyperbole, not an idiom.
The idiom "took a seat" means to sit down or find a place to sit. It is commonly used to describe someone sitting down in a chair, on a bench, or in a designated area for seating.
It takes a long time to do an important job
it means when you are really nervous and cool at the same time.:)
This isn't an idiom. It means exactly what it says. If you read the words and look up what you don't know, you'll see that the person mistook what something looked or seemed like for what it actually was.
It's not an idiom that I've heard. Perhaps you mean "took pleasure in," which means that you enjoyed something.