It's not an idiom - ships once had to ride the tide out of harbors because they didn't have motors and had to rely on the tide and the wind to carry them along.
This is a gambling idiom. If you let something ride, you leave it as it is or let it stand. The image is of you leaving your bet on the table instead of taking the money or changing your bet.
It is not an idiom, it means your nose is itching.
idiom means expression like a page in a book
Simply its mean a bully.
I think it means that that person agrees with that others persons idiom and that it fit that question that the teacher or whoever asked that question.
There is no idiom "the tide turned over." There is a saying that "the tide turned," but it's not an idiom because you can figure out what it means by thinking. Tides "turn" when they shift from high tide to low tide - the currents either go toward the beach or away from it depending on what tide is coming up. People say "the tide turned" or "the tide will turn" to mean that situations in life are changing, just in the same way that the tides change.
Tide Ride was created in 1986.
This is a gambling idiom. If you let something ride, you leave it as it is or let it stand. The image is of you leaving your bet on the table instead of taking the money or changing your bet.
Either: A ride to somewhere for which no payment is demanded. Or an easy time; participation without contributing anything.
The phrase "brow of the tide" is not a commonly used idiom or expression. It could be interpreted as a poetic or metaphorical way of referring to the beginning or peak of the tide, where the water level is rising or at its highest point.
I think you meant 'clam at high tide' or the full version 'happy as a clam at high tide'. This is an idiom/expression dating from the early 19th century. The expression means to be very joyful or content.
ride,tide
If you think about this, you can figure it out. A roller coaster is a fast, scary ride. If something is like a roller coaster ride, it would be a very busy experience that is fun, but also slightly scary.
Barely scraping by the chide of the hay ride tide.
That's when someone goes somewhere with someone else or a group of people despite not being enthusiastic about the destination.
The word tide mean befall.
You cannot stand on the beach and hold back the tide is both an analogy and a metaphor.