phrase. If you tell someone to hang in there or to hang on in there, you are encouraging them to keep trying to do something and not to give up even though it might be difficult. [informal] Hang in there and you never know what is achievable.
tight adjective (RELATIONSHIP)
informal. If two people are tight, they know each other very well and like each other a lot: The two of them were pretty tight at school. Liking.hold something against someone
Fig. to blame something on someone; to bear a grudge against someone; to resent someone. Your brother is mean to me, but I can't hold it against you. You're holding something against me.Alternate Synonyms for "hold tight":
cling to; hold close; clutch; hold; take hold.The mandem is the new 'lads'. You shall now refer to all your male friends as being part of your 'mandem'. This word is roadman slang for insult. If you have been insulted, you have been pared.
rumpy-pumpy in British English
(ˈr?mp?ˈp?mp? ) humorous, slang. sexual intercourse. Collins English Dictionary.butter up. v. To praise or flatter someone in order to make him or her more receptive or willing: My coworker, hoping for a raise, is always buttering up the boss.
Say 'UNCLE' It seems that while "crying uncle" is today regarded as an Americanism, its origins go all the way back to the Roman Empire. Roman children, when beset by a bully, would be forced to say "Patrue, mi Patruissimo," or "Uncle, my best Uncle," in order to surrender and be freed.
To "sit tight" means to not take any further action until you are told to do so. In other words, to wait. There's a bit of a question as to the origin of this idiom.
PPl that are concerned about the "go pound salt" phrase are looking into it too deeply. It means to "Go get lost" which is a pointless thing to do, so you are basically saying to someone, "get out of here" in an angry sort of way.
consarn it. (dialect, dated) A mild oath.
So to say “he's sweating bullets” is to say, quite simply, “he is nervous as a man applying heat to bullets, which could make them explode in his hands.” Back in the 1800's, ammunition for muskets was made by dropping molten lead off of a tower, called a “shot tower” .
Sources speculate that this expression originated sometime in the 1900s and saw a large increase in use post-1980. It comes from the color of rice. The color of rice, and rice itself, are so closely intertwined that they are inextricable. If you are on someone like white on rice, you are watching that person closely.
The expression started in the US in the twentieth century, and is said to originate from the practice of fairground stalls giving out cigars as prizes. This phrase would be said to those who failed to win a prize. "She made a good attempt at catching the baseball. Close, but no cigar."
used for rudely telling someone to stop talking. Synonyms and related words. + Ways of telling someone to stop talking or to be quiet.
The phrase "hang in there" means to not give up on something, even if it's difficult. In other words, it means "Don't give up!" You can tell someone this to encourage them: You can also ask someone if they're "hanging in there".
These phrases are ways to tell someone to keep trying:
- Hang in there.
- Don't give up.
- Keep pushing.
- Keep fighting!
- Stay strong.
- Never give up.
- Never say 'die'.
- Come on! You can do it!.
(someone) is hanging in there. The phrase "hang in there" means to not give up on something, even if it's difficult. In other words, it means "Don't give up!" In casual spoken English, you can leave off the "g" sound at the end of many "-ing" words.