If someone "jumps down your throat" it means they react very angrily about something you said.
The correct idiom is "a frog in my throat," meaning that your voice is hoarse and croaking.
Distill down, or boil down, as an idiom, means to get to the essence of something, or to simplify it.
It means "sit down" in idiom slang. The original phrase was "pop a squat", the word "cop" is a dialect misunderstanding, but now both pop and cop are used in the idiom.
People mean that it is the end of the world/
It is not an idiom, it means your nose is itching.
He like totally flipped out!
when your surprised / in shock
The correct idiom is "a frog in my throat," meaning that your voice is hoarse and croaking.
To do work and focus
Distill down, or boil down, as an idiom, means to get to the essence of something, or to simplify it.
Hoarseness in speech, usually momentary; or a hoarse cough. BTW: Throat, not 'throaght'
I've never heard that idiom before. Perhaps you mean DOWN AND OUT, which means that the person is at a low point in their life, that they're poor in every way and not likely to make a success at anything in the near future.
sit down come over to
It means yelled at you about something and just jumped on your case about something.The idiom "Bite your head off means" someone is extremely angry at you.
The idiom "feeling down in the mouth" means feeling sad or unhappy. It refers to someone looking sorrowful or melancholic, with their mouth turned downwards indicating their emotional state.
This is an idiom meaning to narrow your focus down. It can also mean to narrow your aim and focus on one thing to hit. Picture the zero as a target and you get the idea of the idiom.
Nothing. The phrase would be "out of the frying pan and into the fire," as in you have jumped out of one bad situation into an even worse one.