for days and days (Portuguese - dias a fio )
It's not an idiom. The definition of "at stake" is what is being risked in the situation or venture. A stake is a share or ownership in something.
You might be thinking of "bury the hatchet." It means to end a quarrel or conflict and become friendly.
The idiom "shell out" means to pay a sum of money, usually unwillingly or with reluctance. It implies spending money on something, often more than anticipated or desired.
There is no literal idiom -- an idiom is a phrase that seems to mean one thing but actually means something else. The word "literal" means to take the words exactly as they seem to be.An idiom is a phrase particular to a language that is accepted for its figurative meaning, as in "That amazing shot blew me away." Everyone understands that this person means he was amazed. A literal idiom would be the usually humorous thing that happens when you take the idiom for its word for word, not accepted, meaning. That would mean that somehow the amazing shot actually created the air mass necessary to blow this guy away.
It means to be intelligent. The brain is between the ears.
It's not an idiom. Idioms make no sense unless you know the meaning already. "No end" means just what it looks like -- something is endless.
One idiom that refers to a reward is "the pot at the end of the rainbow".
The idiom 'days and weeks' is used to express a longer duration than something that takes 'hours or days' to occur.
If you put something to rest, you solve the problem and end things.
it is when you are in a situation that is scary and frightening or dangerous, and the hair on your body stands on end.
Yes.
People mean that it is the end of the world/
RFP is not an idiom. It's an abbreviation.
It's not really an idiom. It means "what are you thinking about."
It is not an idiom, it means your nose is itching.
as wise as an owl
idiom means expression like a page in a book