On your bike!

on your bike

Go away and stop being annoying. (Often stylized as "on yer bike!") God, what a dreadful pun—on your bike! All right kids, on yer bikes, you're starting to get on my nerves!
See also: bike, on
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

On your bike!

 and Go to your room!
Sl. imperative. Get out of here!; Get on your bike and get out! What a bad joke! No puns allowed here! On your bike! That was a ridiculous remark. Go to your room!
See also: on
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.

on your bike!

1 go away! 2 take action! British informal
Sense 2 became a catchphrase in 1980s Britain, when it was used as an exhortation to the unemployed to show initiative in their attempt to find work. It was taken from a speech by the Conservative politician Norman Tebbit in which he said of his unemployed father: ‘He did not riot, he got on his bike and looked for work.’
See also: on
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary

on your bike!

(British English, informal) a rude or humorous way of telling somebody to go away: ‘Can I borrow some money, Dave?’ ‘On your bike!’
See also: on
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary

On your bike!

and Go to your room!
imperative Get out of here!; Go away and stop bothing me. (Neither is to be taken literally.) What a bad joke! No puns allowed here! On your bike! Nasty mouth! Such talk! Go to your room!
See also: on
McGraw-Hill's Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions
See also:
  • on your bike
  • get on (one's) bike
  • get on your bike
  • ride the roads
  • bike boys
  • get off (one's) bike
  • get off your bike
  • take (someone or something) for (something)
  • padded
  • live and learn