Saved by the bell



saved by the bell

Cliché saved by the timely intervention of someone or something. (Alludes to a boxer who is saved from being counted out by the bell that ends a round.) I was going to have to do my part, but someone knocked on the door and I didn't have to do it. I was saved by the bell. I wish I had been saved by the bell.
See also: bell, save

Saved by the bell.

something that you say when a difficult situation is ended suddenly before you have to do or say something that you do not want to
Usage notes: In a boxing match, a bell rings when it is time for the fighting to stop.
Luckily, my bus arrived before I had time to reply. Saved by the bell.
See also: bell, Save

saved by the bell

Rescued from a difficulty at the last moment, as in I couldn't put off explaining his absence any longer, but then Bill arrived and I was saved by the bell . This expression alludes to the bell rung at the end of a boxing round, which, if it rings before a knocked-down boxer has been counted out, lets him get up and continue fighting in the next round. Its figurative use dates from the mid-1900s.
See also: bell, save

saved by the bell

mod. saved by the timely intervention of someone or something. I was going to have to do my part, but someone knocked on the door and I didn’t have to do it. I was saved by the bell.
See also: bell, save

Common Names:

NameGenderPronouncedUsage
Drago-Croatian, Serbian, Slovene
LiljaLIL-yah (Icelandic), LEEL-yah (Finnish)Icelandic, Finnish
Daichidah-ee-cheeJapanese
JuliaJOO-lee-ə (English), YOO-lee-ah (German, Swedish, Danish, Finnish), HOO-lyah (Spanish), YUWL-yah (Polish), YOO-lee-yah (Russian), YOO:-lee-ah (Ancient Roman)English, German, Swedish, Norwegian, Danish, Dutch, Spanish, Polish, Finnish, Russian, Ukrainian, An
Cyriacus-Late Roman
Joasiayaw-AH-shahPolish