It is an issue you really don't want to handle or get involved in or a person you really don't want in your life.
idiom means expression like a page in a book
It's a sports reference. If you drop the ball, you have made a mistake and not done what you were supposed to do on your turn, or when the project was in your hands.
This is not an idiom - when you see the words LIKE or AS, you're dealing with a comparison - a metaphor. This is comparing someone to a hound dog tracking a scent.
This is not an idiom. Some people call their loved one by a pet name like "honey" or "darling" or "sweetie."
It depends on how you use it. If you mean literal colors, then it's not an idiom. If you say something like "It's all there in black and white," then it's an idiom meaning that something is printed.
To drop something anywhere , OR a very filthy accomodation
A couch potato is a person who is very lazy and tired all the time. It is not really a potato that sits on a couch. Sometimes people use this idiom* as an exaggeration.*Definition of Idiom: A sentence that says something else to mean the topic.A lazy person
idiom means expression like a page in a book
Its an idiom!!!!!!!
Nothing. I believe you're thinking of "a drop in the bucket," which is an idiom meaning something is only a tiny amount of what is actually needed.
Maybe you have heard the term, "Couch potato" . . . that is someone who lies around watching TV for hours. "Mouse potato" is a cute take-off from couch potato, and refers to people that sit around playing on the computer (using the 'mouse') for hours. This is not a vegetable.
Nothing - it looks like some kind of abbreviation instead of an idiom.
It's not an idiom, it's a joke. And it's "make like a tree and leaf" -- it's a pun.
"A drop" is slang for alcohol in this phrase. It means that someone doesn't drink alcoholic beverages. The image is of the person not even touching the drink with their hands.
a lot of snow
It's a sports reference. If you drop the ball, you have made a mistake and not done what you were supposed to do on your turn, or when the project was in your hands.
This is not an idiom - when you see the words LIKE or AS, you're dealing with a comparison - a metaphor. This is comparing someone to a hound dog tracking a scent.