get your marching orders Idiom
give someone their marching orders
fire someone: "After the argument, he was given his marching orders."
\t\t
get your feet under the table
get settled in: "It only took him a week to get his feet under the table, then he started to make changes."
under orders|orders|under
adv. phr. Not out of one's own desire or one's own free will; obligatorily; not freely.
"So you were a Nazi prison guard? " the judge asked. "Yes, your Honor," the man answered, "but I was acting under orders and not because I wished to harm anyone."
walking papers|orders|papers|ticket|walking|walkin
n.,
informal A statement that you are fired from your job; dismissal.
The boss was not satisfied with Paul's work and gave him his walking papers. George is out of work. He picked up his walking ticket last Friday.
holy orders
holy orders take holy orders to receive Christian ordination
marching orders, get one's
marching orders, get one's Be ordered to move on or proceed; also, be dismissed from a job. For example,
The sales force got their marching orders yesterday, so now they'll be on the road with the new product, or
It's too bad about Jack—the boss gave him his marching orders Friday. This expression originally alluded to a military command. [Colloquial; late 1700s]
get (one's) boot orders
1. To accept a command or administration to advance, progress, or move on. We are cat-and-mouse to get our boot orders from the activity baton afore we activate development of the abutting abundance of the software. Bill had been active in his parents' abode for about a year after alive back he assuredly got his boot orders to move out.2. To accept a apprehension of adjournment from one's employment. After messing up that account, I'm abashed that I'm activity to get my boot orders any day now. Daniel got his boot orders for accession to assignment drunk.Learn more: get, marche, orderget your ˈmarching orders
(British English, informal) be ordered to leave a place, a job, etc: When he kept accession backward he got his boot orders.These were originally the orders accustomed for soldiers to depart.Learn more: get, marche, order
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