Neither. It is an informal expression meaning "It's about to get very exciting." The image is of one's hat being blown off by the wind of acceleration.
Some idioms related to common beliefs are "seeing is believing," "take it with a grain of salt," and "have faith." These idioms reflect the idea that belief is often based on personal experience, skepticism, or trust.
Hang Your Hat on the Wind - 1969 is rated/received certificates of: USA:G
No it is an idiosyncrasy.
No. An idiom is a phrase whose meaning cannot be determined by context. A cliche is a stale quotation or phrase that has been overused.Example idiom: He was feeling under the weatheryesterday, but today he's fine.Example cliche: Think outside of the box.
Georgia Traveler - 2006 A Place to Hang Your Hat was released on: USA: 22 October 2010
Disneyland - 1954 Hang Your Hat on the Wind 17-10 was released on: USA: 29 November 1970
It is definitely possible to hang clothing items other than hats on a hat rack. However, one might need to hang smaller pieces as the racks are smaller sized since they are based upon the sizes of hats. One can hang lighter jackets, gloves and even scarves on a hat rack.
You go on ahead, and I'll hang around.
The A in hang has a short A sound, as in hat and sang. (this sounds slightly different from the short A in ant or am)
The word hang, like bang and sang, has a short A sound.
candles
idioms that you can say