Have you ever HAD a good cry - one where you just sobbed and sobbed until you could barely breathe? Didn't it feel as if everything in your chest was just coming up out of your throat? That's what "crying your heart out" means - crying so hard that it seems your body is turning inside out, crying until every last drop of emotion is wrung out of you.
It means find that part in the heart, tell what it has, and what it is.
It's A SHOULDER TO CRY ON. It's not really an idiom -- the person is offering to let the other person cry on them, as in offer them sympathy.
I cannot find an idiom that starts off "she cried tears." When you cry, you cry tears, so that would not be a good idiom anyway.
Literally it means that you have a heart, you physically possess that bodily organ.
you have broken somone's heart means to hurt someone feelings.
Unless there is truly something wrong with your heart, then yes, it is an idiom. My heart fell, my heart exploded, my heart sang, my heart doing anything other than pumping blood is an analogy and an idiom.
Does it make any sense as read? Yes, so it is a metaphor instead of an idiom.
only some people cry. you do cause your heart goes out to them. i just mean you care, or it could mean that you are scared cause it means that you are going to cry when you find out what is making them cry.
Idiom
It is not an idiom. Unkindness is often called heartlessness, and so the expression "have a heart" means "Do not be unkind."
It means to feel that there is no way to go on and you just want to give up.
The idiom "made his heart feel heavy" suggests that someone or something has caused emotional pain or sadness. It implies that the person's heart is burdened with negative emotions such as guilt, sorrow, or regret.