It's not an idiom, and it's "A picture paints 1,000 words." It means that showing is better than telling, that actions speak louder than words, that the way you act shows your true intentions better than the things you say you'll do.
You've got the idiom incorrect, so it doesn't mean anything. You might say "I've got the picture," which means "I see the situationa and understand it." You might also say "I get the picture," which means the same thing in a less formal way. You don't say "something" in the idiom.
it means u can use pictures and paintings to describe things without using actual wrds
It means that if you show someone something, they understand it far better than if you just tried to explain it in words.
litterbox
portraits in common mean a picture or some kind of frame work that you would prefer doing so horror portrait means a horror picture.. and words like that... u can google it in images.. it would help you better
You've got the idiom incorrect, so it doesn't mean anything. You might say "I've got the picture," which means "I see the situationa and understand it." You might also say "I get the picture," which means the same thing in a less formal way. You don't say "something" in the idiom.
it means u can use pictures and paintings to describe things without using actual wrds
This is an idiom meaning to narrow your focus down. It can also mean to narrow your aim and focus on one thing to hit. Picture the zero as a target and you get the idea of the idiom.
This is not an idiom. Idioms are phrases that don't mean anything unless you know the definition. This is a sentence saying that your photograph or painting or drawing is sitting atop a piano.
It means his voice gave out from emotion, so there was a slight hesitation in his words. It is not an idiom, but an expression whose meaning may be guessed from an understanding of the words in it.
Those are three unrelated words. An idiom is a PHRASE that seems to mean one thing, but actually means another.
Idioms are phrases that you can't guess what they mean just by reading them. This phrase is asking you to figure out what the actual words of the idiom would mean -- the "implied meaning" is what's not said, but meant.
Picture someone weighed down with lead weights -- if you get the lead out, you move faster. It means hurry up.
together mean something different than when they are used separately
This is not an idiom - when you see the words LIKE or AS, you're dealing with a comparison - a metaphor. This is comparing someone to a hound dog tracking a scent.
Picture someone holding their nose up in the air - they look very aloof and snobbish, right? That's what this idiom means.
That means 'it' is like a picture that a painter paints and then he cannot hang it when he has a show and nobody will buy it because they cannot hang it either.