It means in a very short amount of time, as a lamb shaking its tail is quick.
Latin for caud(a) - tail
tail
This isn't an idiom - it's talking about some animal with their tail held high, flying behind them.
it means transform into a majestic peacock and bite people
"Eaten up from nose to tail with curiosity" means that someone is being extremely curious about something and they want to find out about something.
2 shakes of a lambs tail...
In a short timeThe most common expression is "two shakes of a sheep's (or lamb's) tail," not "bee's knee" though.
The phrase "two shakes of a lamb's tail" means doing something very quickly or in a short amount of time, as lambs are known to move rapidly and shake their tails quickly. It expresses a sense of speed or efficiency.
Marking lambs is normally when you castrate the male lambs and tail the lambs and give them their first vaccinations.
if they only shake their tail a bit it means there about to pounce
it shakes its tail
To dock something is to cut of it's tail. it's done to lambs in spring for hygiene and was done to the corgi. fortunately for it, the corgi accepted the change and thus has no proper tail.
Two shakes of a lamb's tail.
I am not too sure what a peins is. Did you mean penis? If so, no. He does not. But he "shakes" or moves his tail up and down to signal what is on his mind.
Two shakes of a lamb's tail.
2 Shakes of a Dogs tail
Two shakes of a lamb's tail or the shortened version of "two shakes" means something will be done right away, quickly. Here's the situation, you walk into a store and ask for an item that has to be retrieved from the back room. The sales person could say something like, "I'll be back in two shakes".