Very simply it means that the business arrangement did not occur for some reason
It's usually "the short end of the stick," and it means you get the worst of the deal.
Conflagration a large fire that causes a great deal of damage
It means move - you are blocking the path in a literal sense. It can also mean that you are or you represent any kind of obstacle to my progress, physical or otherwise, and I want you to stop hindering me. Both of these meanings have a confrontational tone to them, depending on the specific use.The expression can also be used in a more lighthearted way. Say that I am just opening a business, and I am very enthused about the possibility that the business will really take off (succeed quickly and dramatically). I might say something like: "Once my doors open for business, get outta my way! I'm gonna give the competition a run for their money!" (I'm going to give them some competition that they will have to deal with.)
If you have cold feet, you are nervous about doing something. You could also ask someone if they were getting cold feet, meaning are they getting nervous. Tomorrow is your wedding - are you getting cold feet yet?"had reservations about a deal and backed out" Can also be used in the context of marriage... if a groom "has cold feet" it means that he is thinking of backing out of the wedding.getting nervous
No. Deal is not an adjective. Deal can be a noun, as in 'Is it a big deal what part of speech a word comes from?' or a verb, as in 'I will deal with all those who do not think so' or 'Someone should deal out some answers here.'
to finalize a deal
To go up against your fears. To brave something means to face it and to deal with it. Braving the frenzy is an unusual usage, not an idiom itself. Presumedly we might "brave the frenzy" if there were a maddened crowd between us and our destination, and we attempt to go through it.
The literal meaning is to be in water that is deeper than one is tall. The idiomatic meaning is to be too deeply involved with someone or something, beyond what one can deal with.
The literal meaning is to be in water that is deeper than one is tall. The idiomatic meaning is to be too deeply involved with someone or something, beyond what one can deal with.
Nothing - the correct phrase is "grin and bear it," meaning "fake a pleasant expression and deal with whatever is going on until things get better."
the kitchen OBVIOUSLY
bargain as in the expression: ¡Que ganga! What a deal!
Similar to "so what". Just means it's not that exciting.
Sale
It's usually "the short end of the stick," and it means you get the worst of the deal.
To lost all one's money on a bad transaction or business deal
"its no big deal" is the meaning of inbd