kicking the guts
It means that you threw or shot something and hit a bucket.Do you perhaps mean KICK the bucket? To "kick the bucket" is an idiom that means to die.
Distill down, or boil down, as an idiom, means to get to the essence of something, or to simplify it.
If someone "jumps down your throat" it means they react very angrily about something you said.
If you change the wording of an idiom, it's no longer the same phrase, so it doesn't mean what the idiom means. You can say "kick the bucket" to mean someone died, but if you say "kick the pail," it just means you kicked a pail with your foot. Idioms are phrases that are a little like short-hand speech, where one specific image has come to stand for something in the language - if you change the words, you change the meaning.
kicking the guts
dont hurt me when im down , dont try to say any thing when im up?
To do work and focus
It means that you threw or shot something and hit a bucket.Do you perhaps mean KICK the bucket? To "kick the bucket" is an idiom that means to die.
you had it with someone, you dont want to do something no more
Dont let it bother you. forget it.
and IDIOM is like a phrase, that people speak like this.. Ex: Oh that old man is about to kick the bucket! the old man isn't literally going to go kick a bucket, he's just about to die. or another example Ex: i feel like im on top of the world! you dont really feel like your on top of the world you just feel like really happy or satisfied. ****idiom dont mean what they are really saying, its just like a saying. (expression)
Distill down, or boil down, as an idiom, means to get to the essence of something, or to simplify it.
To kick something to the curb is an idiom that means you are discarding something. Imagine that you are in a car and you kick something out as you drive by, or that you kick something off the sidewalk to the curb on the street. If you kick reason to the curb, you discard reason or logic. This would mean that you are ignoring reason and logic and making decisions based on emotion instead.
A metaphor compares two objects that are different without like or as. A metaphor would be "the moon is a cookie". Kick him right square does not compare two things, so it would not be a metaphor. It seems more like an idiom, which does not mean what it is saying. For example, the idiom "Kick the bucket" means death, but a new speaker to English cannot tell because it does not mean what it literally says.
To get a kick means to enjoy - it's an older slang term from the idea of kicking up your heels with joy.
I've never heard that idiom before. Perhaps you mean DOWN AND OUT, which means that the person is at a low point in their life, that they're poor in every way and not likely to make a success at anything in the near future.