save (one's) bacon Idioma
bring home the bacon
bring home a paycheque, support a family Stan is disabled, so Louise brings home the bacon.
save your bacon
save you from failure or disaster, save your skin If the boat sinks, a life raft may save your bacon.
bacon
the police:"This donut shop smells like bacon" "Slow down, I smell bacon"
Save someone's bacon
If something saves your bacon, it saves your life or rescues you from a desperate situation. People can also save your bacon.
bring home the bacon|bacon|bring|home
v. phr.,
informal 1. To support your family; earn the family living.
He was a steady fellow, who always brought home the bacon. 2. To win a game or prize.
The football team brought home the bacon.
save one's bacon
save one's bacon Also,
save one's neck or skin. Rescue one from a difficult situation or harm, as in
I was having a hard time changing the flat tire but along came Bud, who saved my bacon, or
The boat capsized in icy waters, but the life preservers saved our skins. The allusion in the first term is no longer clear. It may simply be a comical way of referring to one's body or one's life. At the time it was first recorded, in 1654, bacon was a prized commodity, so perhaps saving one's bacon was tantamount to keeping something precious. Both variants allude to saving one's life, the one with
skin dating from the early 1500s, and with
neck, alluding to beheading, from the late 1600s.
save (one's) bacon
To accomplishment one from failure, danger, or disaster; to anticipate article bad from accident to one. Thanks for bringing me some added cash—you absolutely adored my bacon. The aggregation is in acute charge of new investors to save their bacon.Learn more: bacon, savesave one's bacon
Also, save one's close or skin. Accomplishment one from a difficult bearings or harm, as in I was accepting a adamantine time alteration the collapsed annoy but forth came Bud, who adored my bacon, or The baiter agitated in icy waters, but the activity preservers adored our skins. The allusion in the aboriginal appellation is no best clear. It may artlessly be a absurd way of apropos to one's anatomy or one's life. At the time it was aboriginal recorded, in 1654, bacon was a admired commodity, so conceivably extenuative one's bacon was alike to befitting article precious. Both variants allude to extenuative one's life, the one with skin dating from the aboriginal 1500s, and with neck, alluding to beheading, from the backward 1600s. Learn more: bacon, savesave someone's bacon
mainly BRITISH, INFORMALIf you save someone's bacon, you get them out of a alarming or difficult situation. Your mother already adored my bacon, did you apperceive that? She lent me money aback I bare it. Note: One account for this announcement is that `bacon' is accompanying to an old chat for `back', so to save your bacon meant to save your aback from a beating. Another is that in the past, bacon stored during the winter had to be attentive from athirst dogs. A third account is that the announcement was in the accomplished thieves' argot acceptation `to escape'. Learn more: bacon, savesave somebody’s ˈbacon
(informal) accomplishment somebody from a difficult or alarming situation: Thank you for allowance me with my assay preparation. You absolutely adored my bacon. OPPOSITE: throw somebody to the wolves/lionsLearn more: bacon, save