The term "green around the gills" is an idiomatic expression used to describe someone who looks ill, unwell, or nauseous. It suggests a pallor or sickly appearance, often associated with feeling queasy or about to vomit. The phrase likely originates from the idea that a person who is feeling nauseous might have a slightly greenish hue to their skin, particularly around the face.
The phrase "green around the gills" typically refers to someone who appears nauseated or unwell, often implying they are feeling sick or faint. This expression can also describe someone who is inexperienced or naïve in a particular situation. The term "green" suggests a lack of maturity or experience, while "gills" evokes the idea of a fish, which can appear pale or discolored when unwell.
Gills are an organ that fish have, that enables them to obtain oxygen from the water that they are in; it is what fish use instead of lungs.
There is no such term as "green CPR".
The term feild means a green green place that is cool :) and has green stuff all arround it
The term going green means.... doing good deeds for the earth and doing things that dont hurt the earth..
The plural "gills" is the collective term for the breathing tissues of fish, amphibians, and some crustaceans. These animals use their gills to extract oxygen from water.
The term aqua is Italian for water, agua is the spanish term for water, and Verde means green in spanish, so I surmise that it means green water
Around the edges.
Breathing is breathing is breathing whatever you use to do it with. There is no special term or word to my knowledge that specifically means "Breathing with gills".
A "Green Card" is the old term of a US Permanent Resident Visa. However, the Permanent Resident Visa is now no longer printed on green paper, nor is it credit-card sized. It's a historical term for the visa.
The origin of filled to the gills comes from goldfish. They will eat and eat until they are stuffed to the gills and make themselves sick. They do not know when to stop eating. So stuffed to the gills is used as an expression for when one has eaten too much.
'Bypass' means to go around an obstruction.