I believe you mean "Yanking your chain.", which means, joking , playing a prank, pulling your leg.
chanking
No -- not when it is being used as a noun phrase by itself. ("She was at the bottom of the chain of command.") However, you would hyphenated it if this noun phrase was being used to modify a noun that came after it: "The ship was plagued by chain-of-command issues." "The comapny had to clarify its chain-of-command policy."
The phrase cold chain refers to when it is winter and freezing cold outside and people are still working and trying to pull and push chains through things.
Irrespective of the chain all wallets are extremely safe, given that Binance Chain only supports self-custodial wallets, it means as long as your secret phrase is only known to you, then your funds are safe. The only way to get into your wallet is to steal your secret phrase, therefore do not tell anyone what the phrase is and keep it extremely safe!
The proper phrase is 'kink in the chain' which originated from the annoying predicament when a specific link of the chain of a bike, tricycle or any other type of chained vehicle causes it to turn in a disrupted motion. This can usually cause the chain to jump or skip due to this tiny inflexible kink. It is now used a little bit as a phrase referring to a small aspect of any kind of process or collaboration that slows everything and everyone down.
There is no phrase like that in the Bible, even though it's true.
A chain is only as strong as its weakest link?
The phrase "dragging the chain" originates from the nautical world, where it describes a ship dragging its anchor, often leading to a loss of control or drifting off course. This metaphor has been adapted into broader usage, signifying a lack of effort or motivation in any task, implying that someone is holding back progress. The phrase evokes a sense of being weighed down or impeded, reflecting the consequences of not fully engaging or contributing.
The correct phrase is 'Be a fountain not a drain'. This phrase means to be something good and useful, not something that sucks all the good away and wastes it. A drain signifies loss, while a fountain signifies abundance.
There is no 'you' or 'U' in the phrase 'IHOP.' IHOP is an acronym that stands for 'International House of Pancakes.' It's a restaurant chain that specializes in breakfast foods.
No, the term 'large restaurants' is a noun phrase; a combination of the adjective 'large' describing the plural noun 'restaurants'.A collective noun is a noun used to group people or things in a descriptive way.The most common collective noun for the noun 'restaurants' is 'chain' as in 'a chain of restaurants'.This collective noun can also function as 'a chain of large restaurants'.
Archipelago is understood to mean a collection of islands, so yes the "of islands" part is redundant.