Confetti is a bunch of tiny bits of colored paper. You throw it up in the air to make a colorful display in celebration of something. Often, you throw confetti at a party or a parade. If you have ever seen a "ticker tape parade" or a New Year's party on TV, you have seen people throw confetti. This isn't really an idiom -- people are really throwing the paper up in the air.
It is when you realize that you can't win and you admit defeat.
"Throw the book at him" IS a sentence.
An idiom that means surrender is to "wave the white flag." A closely related idiom is to "throw in the towel" which means to give up."
It's not an idiom exactly. Romans used to throw Christians into an arena with lions as a form of execution. The phrase has come to mean any situation where someone is put into a situation where there's no way for them to succeed, or into a situation that's far over their head.
To mislead;to deceive The image is of someone throwing dust into your eyes so that you cannot see.
I believe the idiom you're looking for is "You can't trust a person further than you can throw them". The meaning is meant that you cannot trust someone because you can't throw them very far.
Confetti
It is when you realize that you can't win and you admit defeat.
It is called confetti.
if you mean the confetti in your time igloo, then u press the Up button on the keyboard then the confetti blaster will shoot confetti and there you go!
"Throw the book at him" IS a sentence.
I'm not familiar with that as an idiom, so I imagine it means literally throwing jelly at someone.
An idiom that means surrender is to "wave the white flag." A closely related idiom is to "throw in the towel" which means to give up."
It's not an idiom exactly. Romans used to throw Christians into an arena with lions as a form of execution. The phrase has come to mean any situation where someone is put into a situation where there's no way for them to succeed, or into a situation that's far over their head.
To mislead;to deceive The image is of someone throwing dust into your eyes so that you cannot see.
The idiom "throw light upon" means to provide information or insight that helps to clarify or explain a situation, topic, or problem. It is often used to describe shedding light on a particular aspect to gain a better understanding.
It means Confetti made out of Bacon.