Pootie Tang
The correct idiom for the sentence would be "Martin had the answer on the tip of his tongue but Lucy said it first." This idiom means someone was about to provide an answer but another person beat them to it.
Nothing. "Loud of your mind" makes no sense as an idiom or a phrase. You should ask the person to tell you exactly what they did say and explain it to you.
Jose Luis is not an idiom. It is a name.
The idiom feet first can mean a variety of things according to where and with what other expressions it is used. For example "to jump in feet first" means to do something in a quick manner often witohut thinking about it whereas to say "They carried him out of the room feet first." would mean that the person being carried is dead."Feet first" means "dead," (From a body being carried or rolled out horizontal.)
The idiom, 'jump out of your skin,' was first seen in England in the 1800s. It refers to a person being so scared that they 'jump out of their skin,' by dying and becoming a ghost.
A good idiom would be "sitting on the fence."
Of course! Just let me know the idiom you need help completing.
I don't know any such idiom - I believe you are just trying to use plain old English, but with incorrect spelling. You could say "MANY A PERSON has learned a new language."
Nobody keeps records of that sort of thing, but Shakespeare invented a lot of idioms.
I think it means that that person agrees with that others persons idiom and that it fit that question that the teacher or whoever asked that question.
An idiom is a phrase that makes no sense unless you know the idiomatic definition. Can a person really shine like a light? No, so that makes this an idiom. It means time for that person to come to the forefront and be recognized.
"Penny pincher" is the slang term for a stingy person.