Go through the roof definition:
Over the roof idiom.
To become very angry or upset when they realized he'd lied to them, his parents went through the roof.
To increase in quantity, size, or degree.
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To increase in quantity, size, or degree.
Also, to lose one’s temper.
Origin of through the roof this expression originated in the first half of the 1900s.
If something actually were to go through the roof of a house, it would have risen very high and fast, and unexpectedly as well.
Of costs) to increase dramatically.
An idiom’s symbolic sense is quite different from the literal meaning or definition of the words of which it is made.
A dramatic physical or emotional reaction or tirade to any of these.
An idiom is a phrase, saying, or a group of words with a metaphorical (not literal) meaning, which has become accepted in common usage.
To rise to a very high level:
To rise to a very high level:
Something that covers in the manner of a roof, as the top of a car or the upper part of the mouth.
To rise to a very high level sales of their new cd have gone through the roof.
My anxiety level has been out the roof lately.
I'd never have guessed he was a slate off the roof!
Roof over one's head, a;