lace into



lace into someone or something

 and light into someone or something
Fig. to attack, devour, or scold someone or something. We laced into a big meal of pork and beans. The bully punched John once, and then John really laced into him. John lit into him with both fists.
See also: lace

lace someone into something

to tighten the laces of something someone is wearing. Sally helped Billy lace himself into his boots. The maid laced Gloria into her corset.
See also: lace

lace into

Also, light into. Attack, assail, as in He laced into me for arriving late, or She lit into him for forgetting the tickets. The first of these colloquial terms employs lace in the sense of "beat up or thrash," a usage dating from the late 1500s. The idiom with light dates from the late 1800s and stems from the verb meaning "descend."
See also: lace

lace into

v.
To attack or assail someone: The captain laced into me for getting to practice so late.
See also: lace

Common Names:

NameGenderPronouncedUsage
CÂNdida-Portuguese
Edytha-English (Rare)
Raina-Bulgarian
YasmineYAZ-min (English)Persian, Arabic, English (Modern)
MirjamMIR-yahm (German), MEER-yahm (Finnish)Dutch, German, Finnish, Estonian, Slovene
Ingvar-Swedish, Icelandic, Norwegian, Danish