parathesia is the medical word for numbness
This is actually a good example of mixing your metaphors. When you mix a metaphor it means you are combining two different idioms. Walking on egg shells means you are trying very hard not to offend or bring attention to yourself. To be "on pins and needles" means you are anxious about something usually anticipating some bad news. To walk on pins and needles is not an idiom that is often heard or used unless you want to describe how you are trying to avoid attention while waiting for possibly bad news. Mixing metaphors is not uncommon but it's usually done to be funny. "When my mother-in-law comes to visit I am always walking on egg shells". "I'm always on pins and needles waiting for my final grades".
The dark court, school, Pins and needles
Pins were once valuable - before the industrial age, they were made by hand and women saved them up and traded them for goods, just like coins. If you say this, you mean that you'd take the item back if somebody gave you two pins - or, in other words, you're thinking quite seriously about taking that item back to the shop and asking for your money back.
"Pins" in this sense = legs. It's probably being used in a metaphorical sense, approximately the same as the idiom "pull the rug out from under us." It basically means to knock down, metaphorically... to remove the support from an idea or corporation so that it "falls down" and is unable to compete.
Someone who is very worried would be "on pins and needles."
Think about actually being on pins and needles -- ouch!It means feeling sharp anticipation or anxiety; in a state of suspense.Someone who is "on pins and needles" is very anxious and nervous. This not necessarily a negative emotion although the phrase is sometimes used in that way, it is usually used to describe someone who is in great anticipation of some event that have been looking forward to.In British slang the phrase "pins and needles" may also refer to the odd tingly sensation you feel when a body part has "fallen asleep.""On pins and needles" means to be very worried/nervous/anxious about something.If you say "ON pins and needles" it means you are waiting anxiously for something, that you are so eager that you are fidgeting as if you were sitting on something sharp.If you say you have a "pins and needles" feeling in your body, it means that circulation has been temporarily cut off to that part, and when it starts back up, you feel a prickling sensation. You might also hear this phrased as "My foot is asleep" or "My hand fell asleep."If someone is on pins and needles they are very nervous about a situation."I was on pins and needles until I got the results on my test."It means one is virtually tingling with anticipation about something.The idiom "on pins and needles" means anxiously awaiting something.
If you mean disposing of actual pins and needles you should wrap them safely and get rid of them in the trash.
Pines and needles doesn't mean anything. I think you are confusing the term with pins and needles, which does mean that you are tense with anticipation.
Blenophobia - fear of pins/needles
Hari mean needles or pins.
Needles and pins is a British song from the sixties. The original North American English expression is to be on pins and needles or to have pins and needles. An uncomfortable feeling in a part of your body, caused when a normal flow of blood returns after it has been partly blocked... In the song they meant to say the boy got sick when he saw the face of his girlfriend on a specific day.
If someone is on pins and needles, then they are agitated or in a state of suspense. Ex: She was on pins and needles as she waited to hear if she'd gotten the job.
"On pins and needles" refers to anxiety, as though you were being jabbed by sharp points. I was on pins and needles until I got the test results back.
No idioms are real -- the definition of an idiom is a phrase that makes no sense if read literally. Some examples: "green eyed monster" for jealousy, "on pins and needles" for anxious -- there is no real "green eyed monster" nor is anyone actually standing or sitting on pins and needles.
Pins and Needles - 2008 is rated/received certificates of: USA:PG
Pins and Needles - 1980 is rated/received certificates of: Australia:M