| Idiom | Meaning | Example | 
| pissed off [B] | 
angry, mad, pissed, ticked off
 | 
He'll be pissed off if I leave him. He'll be mad.
 | 
| pissed to the gills [B] | 
drunk, plastered, snapped
 | 
He was pissed to the gills, so we sent him home in a taxi.
 | 
| pissing into the wind [B] | 
working at a hopeless job, feeling futile about a task
 | 
Cleaning up an oil spill is like pissing into the wind - hopeless!
 | 
| pit of my stomach | 
(See the pit of my stomach)
 | 
 | 
| pit stop | 
a brief stop to buy gas or go to the washroom
 | 
Excuse me. I have to make a pit stop before we go to the movie.
 | 
| pits | 
(See the pits)
 | 
 | 
| place on a pedestal | 
(See on a pedestal)
 | 
 | 
| plain as day | 
easy to see, clearly visible, in broad daylight
 | 
I saw it, plain as day - Bigfoot - not twenty feet away!
 | 
| plain as the nose on your face | 
very easy to see or understand, very clear, crystal clear
 | 
We have photos of the earth from outer space that prove the earth 
is round. It's plain as the nose on your face!
 | 
| Plan B | 
the substitute for Plan A, an alternative plan
 | 
Plan A depends on getting a student loan. What is Plan B?
 |