Does it mean “you’ll get no change out of me”? (4)
I believe the answer is:
omen
'does it mean you'll' is the definition.
I can't judge whether this definition defines the answer.
'no change out of me?' is the wordplay.
'change' is an anagram indicator.
'out of' is an insertion indicator.
'no' anagrammed gives 'on'.
'on' going around 'me' is 'OMEN'.
'get' is the link.
Can you help me to learn more?
(Other definitions for omen that I've seen before include "Sign of likely future event" , "Harbinger, portent" , "Portent of evil" , "Forecast" , "Straw in the wind" .)