send the helve after the hatchet 관용구
bury the hatchet
stop arguing or fighting, throw down your arms When will the English and the French bury the hatchet?
hatchet man
a politician etc. whose job it is to say negative things about the opposition, a person in a company who must fire extra workers or cut other expenses etc. He is acting as a hatchet man for the leader but I don
Hatchet job
A piece of criticism that destroys someone's reputation is a hatchet job.
bury the hatchet|bury|hatchet
v. phr.,
informal To settle a quarrel or end a war; make peace.
The two men had been enemies a long time, but after the flood they buried the hatchet. Compare: MAKE UP
5.
hatchet face|face|hatchet
n. A long narrow face with sharp parts; also, a person with such a face.
Johnny was sent to the principal's office because he called his teacher old hatchet face. He was hatchet-faced and not at all handsome.
hatchet job|hatchet|job
n. phr.,
slang 1. The act of saying or writing terrible things about someone or something, usually on behalf of one's boss or organization.
When Phil makes speeches against the competition exaggerating their weaknesses, he is doing the hatchet job on behalf of our president. 2. A ruthless, wholesale job of editing a script whereby entire paragraphs or pages are omitted.
Don, my editor, did a hatchet job on my new novel.
hatchet man|hatchet|man
n.,
colloquial 1. A politician or newspaper columnist whose job is to write and say unfavorable things about the opposition.
Bill Lerner is the hatchet man for the Mayor's Party; he smears all the other candidates regularly. 2. An executive officer in a firm whose job it is to fire superfluous personnel, cut back on the budget, etc., in short, to do the necessary but unpleasant things.
The firm hired Cranhart to be hatchet man; his title is that of Executive Vice President.
hatchet
hatchet In addition to the idioms beginning with
hatchet, also see
bury the hatchet.
* * *
-
hatchet job -
hatchet mansend the helve afterwards the hatchet
To accomplish hasty, absent-minded decisions; to abandon article afterwards encountering a setback. The angel alludes to throwing abroad the handle ("helve") of a hatchet afterwards the brand has burst off. Come on, I'm abiding we can fix it—don't accelerate the helve afterwards the hatchet. My little brother consistently gives up at the aboriginal problem, no amount how abounding times we admonish him not to accelerate the helve afterwards the hatchet.Learn more: after, hatchet, send