take the floor



take the floor

 
1. Fig. to stand up and address the audience. When I take the floor, I'll make a short speech. The last time you had the floor, you talked for an hour.
2. Fig. to go to the dance floor in order to dance. They took the floor for the foxtrot. When the band played, everyone took the floor.
See also: floor, take

take the floor

Rise to speak formally to an assembled group, as in After that long introduction, the treasurer took the floor. This idiom uses floor in the sense of "right to speak," in turn derived from its meaning as the part of the legislature from which members address the group. [c. 1800]
See also: floor, take

take the floor

To rise to deliver a formal speech, as to an assembly.
See also: floor, take

Common Names:

NameGenderPronouncedUsage
Mu'tamid-Arabic
Frideswide-History
Christianakris-tee-AN-ə (English)English, Late Roman
Bojidar-Bulgarian
Layne[lein]
Veceslav-Medieval Czech