Sticks of rock
Dried fruits
Gingerbread shapes
A dog sled idiom is a sled that men go on to get pulled by huskies
fish 33% fruits 15% vegies 11% dog sled idoms 41%
"A walk in the park" refers to a task or responsibility that is simple and easy to accomplish.
you have 2 find all the hiden idoms all around cp and ill give you i hint on were one of them are:in the center of box demenshons there will be a box in the midle click it and that's all ill tell you.enjoy!;)
The language is basically the same, but there are differences. Some of the consonants are softer - the c becomes a th sound. Also, parts of Spain commonly use the plural familiar, or vosotros form, which is not used in day to day language in Mexico. Many idoms are different. The situation is very much like the difference between British and American English.
Idioms are quirks in a language, or a language dialect, in which a group of words mean something more than the individual words suggest. For example, we don't expect someone to look skyward when we ask "What's up?" Consider how the word look changes depending on the preposition that follows: look up (research in a book) look up to (respect) look after (tend, as children) look forward to (anticipate eagerly) look into (investigate) look in (visit) look out (guard) These are idioms.
"Hungry!" when Flint shows his invention called 'Super Monkey Thought Translator' "Danger, danger" when Sardine Land is getting ruined. "Steve" when Flint asks if Steve would help him, when Sam Sparks asks if Flint's invention was what it was and when Flint, Sam and Tim keeps on saying each others name at the end. "Steeeeeeeve!" also when Sam Sparks asks if Flint's invention was what it was. "Excited......... excited!" when the burgers were falling from the sky. "Lick, lick, lick, lick, lick, lick....." when Flint, Sam, Manny and Steve are in the elevator to Flint's lab. "Gummi Bears!" when Flint asks what Sam wants for breakfast. "Tap, tap" when Stave taps the Dangometer for the F.L.D.S.M.D.F.R. (Flint Lockwood Diatomic Super Mutating Dynamic Food Replicator) pronounce Fled-dizeh-med-fur. "Yeeellooow" when Steve covers himself in yellow mustard. "Whoa!" when the Mayor (who was fat cus' he ate too much junk food) enters Flint's lab. Steve is also my favourite character in the movie. I think he is one of the funniest characters in the movie.
Who creates idioms? That's pretty hard to answer. We can go back and see when the first appearance happens in print but newspaper and magazine writers aren't known for creating new words but rather mirroring an existing sentiment in the readership. In other words, no one would know what the idiom means unless the public already had exposure to its meaning. Idoms are created by storytellers, cultural groups and stakeholders of interests, clubs, religions etc, etc. On how an idiom gets created let's look at the idiom, Let's get down to brass tacks. When we look back and see how bolts of cloth, canvas and wire were sold in hardware stores we see that a length of rope was just that, the length between the owner's hands. Since these lengths were not uniform an owner or several owners put down markers such as tacks to measure yards, feet and inches. The first occurrence in the local paper talks about getting down to tacks, finally brass tacks. Obviously a saying that occurred in that locality centered around the one place most people would frequent, the hardware store. It caught on and came to mean getting all the facts or to flesh out many details. This is the way an idiom is created but it is the public that has to accept it before it goes into common use.