I do believe you heard the idiom wrong. It's "apple of one's eyes." See the link below for the meaning.
Depends on the size of the apple...the apple I just ate was 140g. It was a small to medium sized apple.
in weights of an apple depends on its size, species, and the amount of nutrients it gets depends on size type texture and nutrients idk weigh it!
This originated exactly where it sounds like it did. The first people who noticed this truth were farmers with apple trees! Nowadays, we use this as an idiom which means that the children are going to be like their parents. If someone in your neighborhood is a bad person who steals, and you catch his son one day trying to steal something, you would say"The apple does not fall far from the tree."
One apple.
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.
The idiom "apple shiner" means the teacher's pet.
Yes
One example of an idiom in Chapter 1 of "Sign of the Beaver" is the phrase "the apple of his eye," which means someone cherished or loved above all others.
Nothing. I'm afraid you've gotten the idiom incorrectly. It should be "the apple of her father's eye" and it means she is his special favorite. The apple of the eye is another term for the pupil or center of the eye.
An apple of discord is a specific issue that causes disagreement between people.
The weight of one apple depends on the size and species. Katie-lou :)
To seek a favor from someone through flattery
The size of an average apple is about the size of an adult Male's fist.
Wow Grandma, your apple pie is so good it blows Mom's apple pie out of the water!
An example of an idiom in the book "The Best School Year Ever" is "the apple of someone's eye." This idiom is used to show that someone is cherished or loved deeply. In the book, the Henderson children are seen as the apple of Mrs. Cavanagh's eye, despite their mischievous behavior.
No it is a description. Something is the size of a potato.
apple size