He remembers you as overwieght now you are skinny
It is not an idiom. It is an expression. The difference is that an idiom's meaning cannot be derived from the meaning of its individual words. In the expression wolfing down food, the meaning is clearly derived from the meaning of the words, and people have been saying it for hundreds of years.
A cliché is a comparative expression that is no longer fresh or interesting because it has been overused. =]
I use this phrase to encourage people when looking for a guy or girl when we go clubbing.. As in: happy hunting (for someone you like)! I combine this with: The hunting season has now been opened! Which is nice to say when you just break up with someone.. But it could mean something different. I just like to use it in this way.
Happy to see.
It means that nothing should be assumed other than what the speaker has said; the speaker means exactly what has been stated, as it is stated. The expression tends to be used when criticizing someone: "That man is a traitor, nothing more and nothing less!"
Past tense of arise
The expression "you found god" means that you or someone else has been saved.
It comes from the old western term for a someone who came to the West to search for gold, found it and had been killed by someone for the gold he or she had. Kind of says it in th expression
No, not in the past coz we hadnt heard, so there no such thing , maybe there will be in the future
yes if it hadnt been said to throttle up or not to be launched that day because of the high winds!
because they hadnt all been officialy revealed yet
he never went over the top rope, so hadnt been eliminated
Darwin wouldn't of found the guanaco or the opossum if he hadnt travelled on the voyage.
yes, darling it is a really great game and it is very fun. i had tried it for the first time in my life and i hadnt ever played any sims before. i have been playing it daily since it came out
That will depend entirely on the algebraic expression which has not been given.
Yes definetely if he hadnt figured out what he did everthing about science would be different!!
The phrase "big girl's blouse" is a British idiom used to describe someone who is seen as weak, ineffectual, or overly sensitive. Its origin is unclear, but it likely emerged as a derogatory way to belittle someone by comparing them to an article of clothing typically associated with femininity and perceived weakness.