This is not an idiom - it means exactly what it says. You will use any means to achieve your goal.
I just means can they have your attention. Making eye contact and listening.listen attentively
It means just what it sounds like - someone is not moving at all, not even one muscle.
An idiom is a phrase that has a figurative meaning different from its literal meaning, while an idiomatic expression is a specific phrase or sentence structure that is characteristic of a particular language or dialect. Idioms are a type of idiomatic expression, but not all idiomatic expressions are idioms.
To blow money means to waste money; ie., "He blew all his money at the slot machines".
she monitors everything that is happening through all her senses and report them to the school management. just like a spy.
It means Im all yours, I will listen to you To be "all ears" means to be listening carefully and with full attention. It is usually used when someone is trying urgently to tell us something.
It is a horse-racing term. If you keep control of a horse's head, you control the way that the horse runs, and how fast it goes. Keeping your head means keeping control of yourself and staying calm in all situations.
Listening with interest.
"It is all Greek to me" it is an English idiomatic expression and the meaning is that something is said that makes no sense, it's like a foreign language, it is not understandable. Which is not true, since the Greeks say "It's all Chinese to me".
The idiomatic expression "all shook up" carries the basic meaning of "being upset" or "being agitated". The agitation involved in being "all shook up" can be negative or positive, depending on the context involved.
It means that it is an expression, and it contains one or more variables. An "expression" is anything that can be calculated to obtain a number. For example, all of the following are expressions: 5 1 + 2 a a + 1 2a a + b
Alright is a contraction of the two word expression 'all right', which means that everything is satisfactory, in agreement, or without doubt.