Someone who "bought the farm" has died.This phrase means to die. If you bought the farm, you'd have the dirt in the ground. This would be for your grave. An example would be "Poor Bob bought the farm last week after he caught pneumonia."
The phrase "you have heavy shoulders" typically means that the person carries a lot of responsibilities or burdens. It suggests that they are shouldering a heavy load, either physically or emotionally.
you keep the form because you paid money already
The phrase "he bought cotton" means that someone purchased cotton material. Cotton is a soft, fluffy fiber commonly used in textile production.
some say that it originated in the 30's or 40's and meant that when someone passed away, their life insurance policy was large enough that they could pay off their mortgages and "buy the farm". A WWII pilot said that it originated from bombers in England during the war that had engine problems after takeoff and would pull a lever that dropped all their bombs at once often onto farms which the government would have to pay for and hence the pilot was said to have bought the farm. I believe the phrase originated during WWI. If a soldier was killed the death benefit was sufficient for the surviving family members to purchase a farm. Hence, a soldier who was killed,"bought the farm." It also might refer to the play and movie "Of Mice and Men". At the end of the story when George has to kill Lenny, George assures Lenny that he (George) has indeed bought the farm where they will both live hapily together.
i think it means a ton or a lot (it is really heavy)
I accept no land/estate/farm "claudes" means defeat.
This phrase means "gay", or "that is gay".Ex. Me: Your dad bought a pastel striped sweater yesterday!You: Tray fruitay!!
The phrase "mean mug" is usually found in literature. The word "mug" in this context is a slang word for face and the phrase "mean mug" is generally meant to convey a description of a face as cruel, but can also describe a face that carries more scars than normal. Usually both meanings are implied.
Cowboys loved a colorful phrase! This meant a heavy rain. The image is of so much rain that it washes a gully into the ground.
This phrase is from H.W.Longfellow poem rain in summer. It means when the heavy rain flew from the top of street, it brought with it all the sand from the upside and the mud and it totally looked like a tide of a river but with full of mud.
That is not a phrase