If you lose track of something, you cannot find it. To lose track of time means that you got busy and let a deadline slip up on you. To lose track of a person means that you have not been in touch for a long time, and no longer know where they are. To lose track of an item means that you have lost it.
A person needs to lose weight.
The idiom, "You lost your marbles," means that you've gone crazy.
Nothing that I know of. I can't even think of an idiom or slang phrase that sounds like "sigh track" - sorry!
You mean ON the right track. Think about it and you can figure it out. If you are on the right track, you're headed the right way. It means you're correct, that you're close to the right answer, that you're doing the right thing.
This isn't an idiom. It means just what it seems to mean. Something is enough so that even a saint would lose patience with it.
to be in dept , to owe money or to lose money
A person needs to lose weight.
Lose your temper.
The idiom, "You lost your marbles," means that you've gone crazy.
Nothing that I know of. I can't even think of an idiom or slang phrase that sounds like "sigh track" - sorry!
It means to feel that there is no way to go on and you just want to give up.
You mean ON the right track. Think about it and you can figure it out. If you are on the right track, you're headed the right way. It means you're correct, that you're close to the right answer, that you're doing the right thing.
This isn't an idiom. It means just what it seems to mean. Something is enough so that even a saint would lose patience with it.
Dropping the ball usually means failing in some way to perform up to expectations.
Slow off the mark means exactly what it says. In track and field the runners are told, On Your Mark, Get Set, Go! If one of them gets off to a slow start then they are slow off the mark which is the line on the track where they are supposed to begin running. This represents an expression and not an idiom or slang.
It's not really an idiom. It means "what are you thinking about."
RFP is not an idiom. It's an abbreviation.