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Anonymous Posted 12 years ago
Grammar

idioms

what idiom mean a lot
  

Top answer

) Bite off more than one can chew. And then some. A bundle.

  • ) Bite off more than one can chew.
  • And then some.
  • A bundle.
  • Cost (someone) an arm and a leg.
  • Have one's hands full.
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2 Answers
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(It depends on what you're trying to measure!)

Bite off more than one can chew.
And then some.
A bundle.
Cost (someone) an arm and a leg.
Have one's hands full.
Make a mountain out of a molehill.
Over one's head.
Quite a few.
Until you're blue in the face.
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You've gone the extra mile there, Avangi; you could choke a dozen dead donkeys with that

Dave

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