One step outside the "inner circle," whatever the inner circle may be. If we are talking about a step parent, the inner circle is the bond between natural parents and child(ren). If we are talking about a cousin, we are talking about a 2nd cousin instead of a 1st cousin. If we're talking about reality, the kook one step outside of reality ought to go see a psychologist!
I do believe you heard the idiom wrong. It's "apple of one's eyes." See the link below for the meaning.
One meaning is, to take something apart, using the removed parts to fix something else.
It means that your never going to get anywhere if you don't start walking! By the way you are AMAZING!
One idiom that starts in such a way would be "a row of fools on a row of stools." This phrase refers to people that spend a lot of time sitting at a bar.
augmented
In one word: dead.
I do believe you heard the idiom wrong. It's "apple of one's eyes." See the link below for the meaning.
No. There is an idiom Spring into action, meaning to get active immediately, and there is an idiom Spring out, meaning to appear suddenly. Use one or the other.
No because the meaning is obvious: you are trying your best at something.
It means according to one explanation or view, or to a certain extent.
You could say they were blowing (or tooting) their own horn.
This is not a recognized idiom in English, but it refers to one. The idiom is "to have a frog in one's throat," which means the tightening discomfort felt during an intense emotion, or just before weeping. It may also be used for the simple need to clear one's throat for speaking..It means somebody who is hoarse or needs to clear his throat
No, the idiom is "turned a blind eye" as in "she turned a blind eye to his suffering." You don't change an idiom around or you lose the meaning.
"With a big heart" means one is sensitive to the needs of others.
No, the phrase "drunk with pleasure" is not considered an idiom. An idiom is a phrase that has a figurative meaning different from its literal meaning. In this case, "drunk with pleasure" is meant to be taken literally, describing a state of intense enjoyment rather than actual intoxication.
There is no literal idiom -- an idiom is a phrase that seems to mean one thing but actually means something else. The word "literal" means to take the words exactly as they seem to be.An idiom is a phrase particular to a language that is accepted for its figurative meaning, as in "That amazing shot blew me away." Everyone understands that this person means he was amazed. A literal idiom would be the usually humorous thing that happens when you take the idiom for its word for word, not accepted, meaning. That would mean that somehow the amazing shot actually created the air mass necessary to blow this guy away.
The meaning of the idiom "to slap the back off you" is fairly straightforward. It implies an exaggeration, that one would slap someone else so hard that their back would come off.