Indian giver イディオム
Indian giver
a person who gives a gift expecting to get it back, change your mind """Can I have the CD I gave you for Christmas?"" he asked. ""Indian giver,"" she replied."
Indian giver|Indian|giver
n. phr. A person who gives one something, but later asks for it back.

An ethnic slur; avoidable.
John gave me a beautiful fountain pen, but a week later, like an Indian giver, he wanted it back.an Indian giver
A being who asks the acknowledgment of or takes aback a allowance afterwards they accept accustomed it. One of abounding expressions generally advised abhorrent for authoritative advertence to Native American stereotypes or tropes. I'm apologetic to be an Indian giver like this, but I'm abashed I charge the $50 aback that I gave you aftermost week.Learn more: giver, IndianIndian giver
One who takes or demands aback one's allowance to another, as in Jimmy capital to booty aback Dan's altogether present, but Mom said that would accomplish him an Indian giver . This term, now advised offensive, originally alluded to the Native American convenance of assured a allowance in acknowledgment for one that is given. [Colloquial; aboriginal 1800s] Learn more: giver, IndianIndian giver
Someone who gives a allowance and again wants it returned. Native Americans' abridgement was based on the bargain system; therefore, an account that colonists and settlers took to be an absolute allowance was accepted to be reciprocated. When it was not, the giver capital the account returned. The abhorrent phrase, which aboriginal appeared in mid-18th-century New England, is now rarely acclimated . . . and appropriately so.Learn more: giver, Indian