take me for a ride or in a sexual expression it can me sex
"Took place" is the past tense of "take place." It means "to occur."
It is not an idiom. It means exactly what it says: to take something along with you.On the other hand, if you are asking about "You can'ttake it with you," that is a saying meaning that when you die, none of your belongings accompany you, so you may as well use them now.
Trite is something that is lacking in freshness and effectiveness due to its constant use or repetition. A trite expression is which used by everyone and thus, has lost its meaning.
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 face showing no expression
of Spin, a. & n. from Spin.
of Spin, a. & n. from Spin.
the meaning for the name abinaya is expression
It means "I can't take any more."
take a spin in my car.... ummm....see how my life is compared to yours?
this means that she takes things to serious
"Took place" is the past tense of "take place." It means "to occur."
literal meaning
Take part is a phrasal verb. It has the idiomatic meaning of be involved in something egAre you going to take part in the discussion?
This expression means real and simple.
Get wind of
An expression of a meaning that contradicts the literal meaning is called an idiom. Idioms are phrases that have a figurative rather than literal meaning, often making them difficult to understand when translated directly.