Being full of food .
The phrase "filled to the gills" originates from the fish anatomy term "gills," which are the breathing organs for many aquatic animals. When a fish is "filled to the gills," it means it is completely full or packed to capacity, like a fish that has eaten so much that its gills are bulging.
If you go fishing or even just go to the fish market, look down into a fish's mouth. You will see the gills on both sides and just after the gills in the oral cavity you will see the opening of the gullet. If you have a particularly well-fed fish, the gullet may show unswallowed food because the stomach is too full to hold more so, it is waiting to be swallowed. Humans don't have gills but the analogy can be appropriate when you feel you have swallowed more than your stomach can hold.
It's not an idiom. To listen closely means to pay attention and listen carefully.
It's not an idiom. The definition of "at stake" is what is being risked in the situation or venture. A stake is a share or ownership in something.
The idiom "pick up your ears" means to listen carefully or pay close attention to something being said. It's a figurative way of telling someone to be alert and actively engage in the conversation or situation.
I can't eat another bite, I am stuffed to the gills.
It means the person looks sick. Usually they are pale and green in the face.
The phrase "filled to the gills" originates from the fish anatomy term "gills," which are the breathing organs for many aquatic animals. When a fish is "filled to the gills," it means it is completely full or packed to capacity, like a fish that has eaten so much that its gills are bulging.
When someone has eaten a lot and are very full.Over-eaten; too full after a meal"Stuffed to the gills" means that a person is very full, or satiated, from eating too much, because stuffed refers to being full of food or other things, while "to the gills" refers to a whole fish with stuffing in the body cavity up to behind the head where the gills are located.The term is "stuffed to the gills" and is when someone ate too much and is overfull.It is referring to a part of the fish, that is just under the head. A human equivalent would be the lower cheeks next to, and the upper throat under the mouth.It is also used in the expression, he lookeda little green around thegills.Stuffed up to the Gills means you have filled up your stomach and even your esophagus, and can't eat any more without looking a little green around the gills and maybe throwing up.
It is not an idiom, it means your nose is itching.
It's not really an idiom. It means "what are you thinking about."
RFP is not an idiom. It's an abbreviation.
"Sieve" is not an idiom. See the related link.
It's not an idiom. It means the tip of your nostril.
idiom means expression like a page in a book
An idiom that means prone to nausea might be "green at the gills." This refers to the fact that your face pales when you feel nauseated. Some people thought that color was a pale green, and this started the phrase. You might also hear "an upset stomach." This can mean any sort of discomfort in the abdominal area, from nausea to diarrhea.
This is not an idiom. It is a measurement. $100,000 is how you write it in numbers.