It means fled, or ran away.
This is a straightforward idiom derived from seeing the tail of an animal as it runs away. To "turn tail" is to turn around and leave, which would typically be the response of a weaker animal to another, stronger animal.
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The tail lights and the stop lights work off of different circuits. The stop lights work when the brake pedal is depressed while the tail lights work when the light switch is turned on. Look for a burnt fuse or a bad connection.
How did Broly lose his tailhe never did lose his tail... as they reborn Broly in the 3rd and most suckish Broly movie... He was naked in a medical tank type of thing... tail and all
Latin for caud(a) - tail
It means they are stretching the feathers in the tail
You mean cauda. It means the tail of an animal. And coda is Italian for tail.
The phrase "his tail fling in the air" can mean that the tail is positioned or moving upwards. This can be a sign of excitement, aggression, or playfulness depending on the context.
Not sure about the tail, but the phrase "To have seen the Elephant" meant to have been involved in a battle. It was in common use around the US civil war years. It was more generally used to mean "I've done a thing that I was greatly looking forward to, and it turned out to not be as good as I had hoped"
I wondered that myself. Turns out it's not a sun, it's a light bulb. The answer I found is this: "Indicates that the side marker, parking, tail, license plate, instrument panel and headlights have been turned on."
It means that the mermaid that has a red tail is in-love!
The dash lights and the tail lights are on the same fuse. In all probability, you have a short circuit in the tail light wiring.
tail