Literal meaning is in a fine plumage, the idiom means well dressed; of an excellent appearance
great house
The word "house" meaning "a building" is a noun. The word "house" meaning "to put in a house" is a verb.
house surfeit
A house for hatching fish, etc.
I asked somebody to paint my house and he did and it means that My house was painted by someone I had / got something done (by someone)
great house
"Satis house" does not have a literal meaning in English. It is the name of a fictional house in Charles Dickens' novel "Great Expectations."
The literal meaning is what the words themselves mean, whereas the intended meaning is what the speaker or writer actually tried to say. For instance, take the idiom "on the house." Taken literally, it would mean that some object is located on top of someone's house. However, the intended meaning is that someone else (called "the house") is paying for the item, and thus it is free to those included in the statement. You also see a difference between literal and intended meanings in words and phrases borrowed from other languages. Take for instance, the word wiki. The literal meaning in Hawaiian is "very fast." However, the intended meaning in English is a website in which users can edit - like this one. In some cases of course, the literal meaning is exactly the same as the intended meaning. Sometimes people mean exactly what they say.
The literal meaning of "dominus" is master of a house. Secondary meanings are master or lord.
Go to Zappa Park, then the map. On the far right, the land should take a dip kinda. Beneath a yellow and tan house is a feather. Take the feather to a pimp in Cashola. The pimp is by a yellow and tan house and is dressed in pink. He trades you $90 for the feather.
There are Angels in your life
You walk as close as possible to it.
that is good luck (i think)
The cast of The Weight of a Feather - 1912 includes: Mayme Kelso as The Boarding House Keeper
It's the literal translation of the Hebrew. Beth=house and lehem=bread.
you will die or someone will die at your house
The phrase "house of figs" doesn't have a widely recognized meaning on its own. However, it could be interpreted as a place (literal or metaphorical) where figs are grown or stored, or it could be used in a poetic or metaphorical sense to represent a sense of abundance or richness.