throw the book at somebody イディオム
get wise to something/somebody
learn about something kept secret He finally got wise to the fact that they were stealing his money.
somebody up there loves/hates me
an expression meaning that an unseen power in heaven has been favorable/unfavorable to you "Somebody up there loves me," he said as he found the money on the side of the road.
get on (well) with (somebody)
have a good relationship with
" I get on very well with my colleagues."
Put somebody's nose out of joint
If you put someone's nose out of joint, you irritate them or make them angry with you.
Take your hat off to somebody
If you take your hat off to someone, you acknowledge that they have done something exceptional or otherwise deserve your respect.
go somebody one better|go|go one better|one better
v. phr.,
informal To do something better than (someone else); do more or better than; beat.
Bill's mother gave the boys in Bill's club hot dogs for refreshments, so Tom's mother said that she would go her one better next time by giving them hot dogs and ice cream. John made a good dive into the water, but Bob went him one better by diving in backwards.
somebody up there loves me|hate|hates|love|loves|s
slang An expression intimating that an unseen power in heaven, such as God, has been favorable or unfavorable to the one making the exclamation.
Look at all the money I won! I say somebody up there sure loves me! Look at all the money I've lost! I say somebody up there sure hates me!
somebody up there loves me
somebody up there loves me I am having very good luck right now; also, someone with influence is favoring me. For example,
I won $40 on that horse—somebody up there loves me, or
I don't know how I got that great assignment; somebody up there loves me. This idiom, generally used half-jokingly, alludes either to heavenly intervention or to the help of a temporal higher authority. [Colloquial; mid-1900s] Also see
friend in court.
throw the book at (one)
1. To administer all accessible bent accuse to a lawbreaker; to appoint the best accessible abuse or bastille book adjoin a bedevilled criminal. After his third offense, the adjudicator threw the book at the criminal, authoritative acquittal all but an impossibility.2. To abuse or admonishment addition as acutely as possible. The antidotal lath threw the book at him for the aspersing abuse he collapsed at his employees.Learn more: book, throwthrow the ˈbook at somebody
(informal) abuse or criticize somebody for as abounding things as possible: The badge chock-full me for dispatch and threw the book at me for aggregate — adulterated lights, alarming tyres, no insurance...Learn more: book, somebody, throw
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