Idioms normally have dissimilar meanings when the words are taken apart. This makes idioms similar to math when trying to solve them.
No he doesn't like math
The inverse of 'If I like math then I like science' is 'If I do not like math then I do not like science'.
If you do not like math, then you do not like science.
If I do not like math, then I do not like science.
The inverse of the statement "If I like math, then I like science" is "If I do not like math, then I do not like science." In this case, the relationship between liking math and science is negated while maintaining the original conditional structure.
idiom means expression like a page in a book
It's not an idiom. It means exactly what it looks like.
idiom is like discribe e.g as light as a feather
It is an idiom, because it does not use the term "like" or "as".
That is not an idiom. When you see the word LIKE, you're looking at a simile.
no an idiom would be like "it's raining cats and dogs"
Sure! Please provide the idiom you'd like me to explain.
This is not an idiom. It means exactly what it looks like -- you felt the emotion that would lead you to start crying.
Nothing - it looks like some kind of abbreviation instead of an idiom.
"Bring some objectivity into the matter under discussion", don't just rely on subjective factors.
Its an idiom!!!!!!!
the answer is idiom