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- over a barrel
over a barrel
*over a barrel
Fig. out of one's control; in a dilemma. (*Typically: get someone ~; have someone ~; put someone ~.) He got me over a barrel, and I had to do what he said. Ann will do exactly what I say. I've got her over a barrel.
over a barrel
in a situation in which someone has no choice about what to do
The software company has you over a barrel – if you don't accept the license, you can't use the software. Usage notes: usually used with have, as in the example
Etymology: based on the idea of making someone lie on a barrel (a large, curved container) so they will be unable to move freely
over a barrel
In a weak or difficult position, as in Once the competitors found a flaw in our product, they had us over a barrel. This slangy expression, first recorded in 1938, supposedly alludes to reviving a drowning victim by placing the body head down over a barrel and rolling it back and forth, so as to empty the lungs of water. The expression survives, although happily the practice does not.
over a barrel
In a very awkward position from which extrication is difficult: During the negotiations the opposing faction had us over a barrel.
Common Names:
Name | Gender | Pronounced | Usage |
Clayton | | ['kleitn] | |
Caleb | | KAY-ləb (English) | English, Biblical |
Albina | | [æl'bainə] | |
Klara | | KLAH-rah (German, Russian, Polish) | Swedish, Norwegian, Danish, Icelandic, German, Russian, Ukrainian, Polish, Slovene, Croatian |
Shet | | - | Biblical Hebrew |
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