take a drubbing



take a drubbing

1. To be thoroughly beaten or thrashed. My younger brother was always a shy, skinny kid who often took a drubbing from schoolyard bullies.
2. To be soundly defeated or bested; to lose by a wide margin. Their team's inexperience showed on the pitch today, as they took a drubbing from the powerful squad from New Zealand.
3. To suffer severe losses or setbacks. The stock market took a drubbing over the weekend after fears of Greece's exit from the Eurozone. My efforts to get my PhD have taken a drubbing over the last couple of years, but I'm still determined to see it through.
4. To be very strongly rebuked, criticized, or condemned. The giant supermarket chain has taken a drubbing lately over allegations that they've been threatening local shops and markets. Mark sure took a drubbing because of that prank he pulled in class yesterday.
See also: take

Common Names:

NameGenderPronouncedUsage
Mclaughlin[mə'klɔ:flin]
NicholasNIK-ə-ləs (English), nee-ko-LAH (French)English, French
Arrington['æriŋtən]
Basileios-Ancient Greek
Eose-aws (Ancient Greek), EE-aws (English)Greek Mythology
Bent (2)-Frisian