squeak through



squeak something through

Fig. to manage just to get something accepted or approved. I just managed to squeak the proposal through. Tom squeaked the application through at the last minute.
See also: squeak

squeak through

 (something)
1. Fig. to manage just to squeeze through an opening. The child squeaked through the opening and escaped. Sally squeaked through and got away.
2. Fig. to manage just to get past a barrier, such as an examination or interview. (Fig. on {2}.) Sally just barely squeaked through the interview, but she got the job. I wasn't too alert and I just squeaked through.
See also: squeak

squeak through

v.
To manage barely to pass, win, or survive something: The student squeaked through the course with a D minus.
See also: squeak

Common Names:

NameGenderPronouncedUsage
NermİN-Turkish
SaschaZAH-shahGerman
Doran['dɔ:ræn]
Hildegarde['hildəga:d]
MerleMURLEnglish
Batul-Arabic