In my opinion it means don't say anything if you aren't going to do something about it
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It depends on how you use it. If you mean literal colors, then it's not an idiom. If you say something like "It's all there in black and white," then it's an idiom meaning that something is printed.
The idiom is " all the bells and whistles ". It means, all the extras possible. For example, the new car came with all the bells and whistles. It was loaded with every option possible.
It means to compromise and negotiate. Imagine traveling halfway to someone's house to meet them instead of making them come all the way to your house.
The abstract noun form of the verb "bite" is "biting." Abstract nouns refer to concepts, qualities, or states rather than physical objects or actions. In this case, "biting" represents the act or concept of biting, without specifying a specific instance or object involved.
Ace up his sleeve, All Greek to me, Apple of my eye and All bark and no bite are idioms. They begin with the letter A.
It's a very old Scottish/Irish way of saying "I bet you can't back up all that s*** you're talking."
It means that their bark is bigger than their bite. they bark all the time but there is a low chance of them ever going to bite you. Like when a dog barks at the door, it does not mean that they are going to bite whoever walks in, they are just barking.
Total Blackout - 2012 All Bark No Bite 2-12 was released on: USA: June 2013
to talk a lot but never take action.
Pound Puppies - 2010 All Bark and Little Bite 3-15 was released on: USA: 24 August 2013
"All bark and no bite," "Across the board," "Day late and a dollar short" are all examples of idioms. An idiom is a colloquial metaphor, meaning a term requiring some previous knowledge, to be used only in a certain culture.
For example: My dog loves to bark at the mailman. The rabbits had stripped the bark from all around the base of the new tree. The canoe was made of birch bark and pine pitch. His bark was worse than his bite.
On first meeting he appear to be a very stern indeed miserable old man. However, those that new him well all stated that, "his bark was worse than his bite"
All bark and no bite is a phrase that describes people. It begins with the letter a.
It comes, literally, from assembling all of a ship's crew (all hands) at their mustering point on the ship's deck. This would occur typically in a battle situation. The idiom suggests that all personnel are needed, as for a major undertaking or project.
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