词汇 | take a powder |
释义 | Idiom take a powder Theme: DEPART to leave (a place); to sneak out or run out (of a place).(Slang.)When the police came to the door, Tom decided it was time to take a powder. He left by the back door.When the party got a little dull, Bill and his friend took a powder. Slang take a powder Theme: DEPART tr. to leave; to leave town. (Underworld.)Why don't you take a powder? Go on! Beat it!Bruno took a powder and will lie low for a while. Idiom take a powder American, informal to leave a place suddenly, especially in order to avoid an unpleasant situation.He saw the police coming and took a powder. take a powderTo leave a place very quickly and often discreetly. Sometimes used as an imperative. Realizing they would blame him for the error, Jim took a powder while everyone's attention was diverted. I recommend you take a powder before things start getting dangerous. take a powderSl. to leave; to leave town. (Underworld.) Why don't you take a powder? Go on! Beat it! Willie took a powder and will lie low for a while. take a powderMake a speedy departure, run away, as in I looked around and he was gone-he'd taken a powder. This slangy idiom may be derived from the British dialect sense of powder as "a sudden hurry," a usage dating from about 1600. It may also allude to the explosive quality of gunpowder. take a powderAMERICAN, INFORMALIf you take a powder, you leave a place very quickly and usually secretly. I knew that even if they realized I'd taken a powder, they wouldn't go looking for me. take a powderdepart quickly, especially in order to avoid a difficult situation. North American informal 2002 New York Times Why don't you take a powder, jerk, or how'd you like a knuckle sandwich? take a ˈpowder(American English, informal) leave suddenly; run away: She hung about all morning getting in my way, so in the end I told her to take a powder.take a powder tv. to leave; to leave town. (Underworld.) Bruno took a powder and will lie low for a while. take a powder To make a quick departure; run away. take a powder, toTo leave quickly. The origin of this expression is obscure, even though it is relatively recent (twentieth century). Since about 1600 a powder has meant “a hurry,” possibly derived from the speed of gunpowder. “Ile sett you in with a powder,” that is, with a rush, appears in a play, Club Law (ca. 1600), by an unknown writer. This meaning persisted well into the nineteenth century, mainly in Britain. In the 1920s, however, in popular literature, characters departing in haste were said to take a runout powder. P. G. Wodehouse used it in Money in the Bank (1942), “And have him take a runout powder? Be yourself, lady.” One writer has suggested this might refer to a laxative, but that interpretation seems unlikely. Moreover, the French have a similar expression, Prendre la poudre d’escampette, “To take the scampering powder,” or, in more idiomatic terms, “to bolt.” Take a powder!Scram! This tough-guy phrase came from the days when a ladies' bathroom was euphemistically called the powder room, the place where women went, among other reasons, to apply makeup. As gangster movies would have us believe, a lady's escort who wanted to discuss a matter in privacy with another gent told her to “take a powder.” Similarly, a genteel way to say you were going to the ladies' room was “I'm going to powder my nose.” |
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