It means someone who is very good at things like gardening and growing things.
Having a green thumb. (Being successful with plants and ACTUALLY planting the plants.)
"to be green" is to be new at something, inexperienced, a rookie or novice
It's not an idiom. It's American slang for money, because American paper bills are green (and they fold when you put them in your pocket).
It means swearing violently and creatively.
It means the person looks sick. Usually they are pale and green in the face.
Gardeners who worked with earthenware pots found their thumbs stained green from algae growing on the outside of these pots, according to one theory. Another theory claims that King Edward the First loved green peas, and had serfs shell them. Whichever serf had the greenest thumb won some sort of prize.
The idiom "green fingers," primarily used in British English, refers to someone with a natural talent for gardening and growing plants. The origin of the phrase is believed to stem from the visible green stains that often appear on gardeners' fingers from handling plants and soil. It suggests a deep connection with nature and an ability to nurture growth. The term is synonymous with the American expression "green thumb."
No, it is a metaphor comparing someone's thumb to a magical item.
πράσινο αντίχειρα Means Green Thumb in Greek.
it means that you like what the person said about the video or that you agree with him or her.
Colloquially, people who are good at gardening are referred to as having a "green thumb".
The cast of Green Thumb - 2013 includes: Michael Glody as himself