Holiday Style.
Friction
no its a simile...an idiom is something like "spilled the beans" where you cannot guess the meaning by looking at the words
Shel Silverstein.
hlkjljk;
Sidewalk Records ended in 1970.
In Akron, Ohio. It is the term for the strip of lawn between the sidewalk and the street curb.
I can't find this phrase using my search engine. I suspect you may have heard "friends of the sidewalk" or some other such phrase. That would mean people who were willing to donate money to repair a section of sidewalk or road.
as wise as an owl
It's not an idiom. Idioms make no sense unless you know the meaning already. "No end" means just what it looks like -- something is endless.
The trash cans are by where the two cars are parked at the end of the sidewalk.
Sorry, there is no such idiom as "at wit's put end to". "at wit's end" means you have tried every possible way to solve a problem but cannot do it and do not know what to do next. "put and end to" means to stop or put a stop to something.
The idiom of going to the dogs means that any person or thing has come to a bad end, been ruined, or looks terrible.
It's not an idiom. "Fruits" means the end result of something, so "fruits of labor" would be what you earned from hard work.
It means complete and total frustration with a situation.
The idiom "for days on end" means continuously for several days without stopping or taking a break. It emphasizes the prolonged duration of an activity or situation.
The "-s" at the end of "lingers" is a verb suffix, indicating present tense for the action of lingering. The "-s" at the end of "sidewalks" is a noun suffix, indicating that there is more than one sidewalk.