In Drama certain parts are most properly played by certain types of people. For example in 'The Andy Griffin Show' the part of Opie was played by a very very young Ron Howard. A decades or so later Ron Howard wasn't playing a very young boy anymore but was playing a high school student Richard Cunningham in "Happy Days'.
Why didn't he play a young child anymore? Because he wasn't a child anymore. He had 'out grown the part'. In other words: 'his physical reality didn't accurately depict the illusion he would have been trying to portray.
to circumnavigate
Lemons grow on trees.
OY is a Yiddish word - it is usually part of the phrase "oy vey" which means "oh woe" or "alas" but occasionally you see it alone. It is a term of despair which is used as an exclamation in time of trouble and strife.
in the pymramids ner da spinx
to grow plants
It is a part of an expression related to ratios.
This expression is saying that it is the best they can get. Which is "the best part of anything".
The expression I can only imagine is used to relate to something you are not physically part of. It means that you can visualize what the storyteller is saying.
I think you mean like here to mean about, in which case it's an adjective
Not really. A term is a part of an expression.
You convert an (infix) expression into a postfix expression as part of the process of generating code to evaluate that expression.
"Grows" is a third-person singular expression of the infinitive to grow. For example, "she grows," but "I grow," and "they also grow."
Replace each variable in the expression by its value and then find the value of the expression.
mean*
"Grow homesick" is an idiomatic expression that means to start feeling longing or nostalgia for one's home or a familiar place. It implies a deep emotional connection to one's roots and a desire to return to a place that feels like home.
This expression means " You mean everything in the whole world to me. " A very romantic expression of love.
Most believe hairs grow from the skull, they in fact grow from the mulitidermabellum in the brain, hence the expression, as hairy as your thoughts!