"I'm beat" means "I am very tired."
Well first off the i am very tired answer is beat... beat means total epic defeat, when you lose at anything you are beat, the phrase 'im beat' or 'your beat' can be used when anything happens that you are inconvenienced or something happens that is not in your favor
exhausted, imagine beating something rough until it has softened. It expresses the similarity.
"To be" is not an idiom - it's a verb.
Pest is not an idiom. It's a word.
The idiom "apple shiner" means the teacher's pet.
The meaning of the idiom in the pink of health means being in good health.
Er ... I think you heard them wrong. That's not an idiom, it's a suggestion that you attack a bush.Perhaps you are thinking of "don't beat around the bush," which means to get to the point.
exhausted, imagine beating something rough until it has softened. It expresses the similarity.
"To be" is not an idiom - it's a verb.
Pest is not an idiom. It's a word.
The idiom "apple shiner" means the teacher's pet.
The meaning of the idiom in the pink of health means being in good health.
The idiom means impress someone is egg on
It's not an idiom - to cope means to deal with, or to handle
"Old hand" is an idiom meaning having lots of experience.
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.
No. This is not an idiom. An idiom is a group of words whose meaning is different from the meanings of the individual words. So it is not easy to know the meaning of an idiom. For example 'Let the cat out of the bag' is an idiom meaning to tell a secret by mistake. The meaning has nothing to do with cats or bags. "Treat others like you would want them to treat you" is a saying,
"That really burns me up."