[give her the gun] See: GIVE IT THE GUN.
[give in]{v.} To stop fighting or arguing and do as the other personwants; give someone his own way; stop opposing someone. •/Mother keptinviting Mrs. Smith to stay for lunch, and finally she gave in./ •/AfterBilly proved that he could ride a bicycle safely, his father gave in to him andbought him one./ Compare: GIVE UP, SAY UNCLE.
[give it some thought]{v. phr.} To wait and see; consider somethingafter some time has elapsed. •/"Will you buy my car?" Fred asked. "Let megive it some thought," Jim answered./ Contrast: SLEEP ON.
[give it the gun] or [give her the gun] {v. phr.}, {slang} Togun or speed up a motor; make a car, airplane, or something driven by a motorgo faster. •/The race driver gave it the gun./ •/The speedboat pilot gaveher the gun./ Compare: STEP ON IT.
[give it to]{v. phr.}, {informal} 1. To give punishment to; beat.•/The crowd yelled for the wrestler to give it to his opponent./ Syn.: LETHAVE IT. 2. To scold. •/Jerry’s mother gave it to him for coming homelate./ Compare: GIVE A PIECE OF ONE’S MIND, LACE INTO. Contrast: CATCH IT.
[give it to one straight]{v. phr.} To be direct; be frank. •/I askedthe doctor to give it to me straight how long I have to live./
[give no quarter]{v. phr.} To be ruthless and show no mercy. •/Theenemy soldiers gave no quarter and shot all the prisoners./
[give notice]{v. phr.} To inform an employer, an employee, a landlord,or a tenant of the termination of a contractual agreement of service ortenancy. •/Max gave notice at the bank where he was working./ •/Sally wasgiven notice by her landlord./
[given to]{adj. phr.} Having a tendency to; addicted to. •/Phil isgiven to telling fantastic tales about his chateau in France./
[give off]{v.} To send out; let out; put forth. •/Rotten eggs giveoff a bad smell./ •/Burning leaves give off thick smoke./ Syn.: GIVEOUT(2).
[give of oneself]{v. phr.}, {literary} To give your time andeffort to help others. •/You should give of yourself sometimes./ •/DuringWorld War II, Governor Baldwin gave of himself by sweeping the halls of ahospital every afternoon./
[give one a dressing down] See: DRESSING DOWN.
[give one a free hand] See: FREE HAND.
[give one a (good) going-over] See: GO OVER(1).
[give one a lift]{v. phr.} 1. To give someone a ride. •/Jack gave mea lift in his new car./ 2. To comfort someone. •/Talking to my doctoryesterday gave me a lift./
[give one an inch, and he will take a mile] If you give some people alittle or yield anything, they will want more and more; some people are neversatisfied. •/I gave Billy a bite of candy and he wanted more and more. If yougive him an inch, he’ll take a mile./ •/The counselor said to Jack, "No, Ican’t let you get a haircut until Saturday. It’s against the rules, and if Igive an inch, someone will take a mile."/
[give one a piece of one’s mind]{v. phr.}, {informal} To scoldangrily; say what you really think to (someone). •/Mr. Allen gave the otherdriver a piece of his mind./ •/The sergeant gave the soldier a piece of hismind for not cleaning his boots./ Syn.: TELL OFF. Compare: BAWL OUT, DRESSDOWN, GIVE IT TO, TONGUE LASHING.
[give one a ring] also {informal} [give a buzz] To call on thetelephone. •/Mrs. Jacobs promised to give her husband a ring in theafternoon./ •/Alice will give her friend a buzz tonight./
[give one enough rope and he will hang himself]{informal} Give a badperson enough time and freedom to do as he pleases, and he may make a badmistake or get into trouble and be caught. — A proverb. •/Johnny is alwaysstealing and hasn’t been caught. But give him enough rope and he’ll hanghimself./ — Often used in a short form, "give one enough rope". •/Motherdidn’t know who robbed the cookie jar, but she thought she could catch him ifshe gave him enough rope./
[give one pause]{v. phr.} To astonish someone; cause one to stop andthink. •/"Your remark gives me pause," Tom said, when Jane called him anincurable gambler./
[give one short shrift] See: SHORT SHRIFT.
[give oneself airs]{v. phr.} To act proud; act vain. •/Mary gaveherself airs when she wore her new dress./ •/John gave himself airs when hewon first prize./
[give oneself away]{v. phr.} To show guilt; show you have done wrong.•/The thief gave himself away by spending so much money./ •/Carl played ajoke on Bob and gave himself away by laughing./ Compare: GIVE AWAY.
[give oneself up]{v.} To stop hiding or running away; surrender.•/The thief gave himself up to the police./ •/Mr. Thompson hit anothercar, and his wife told him to give himself up./ Compare: TURN IN.
[give oneself up to]{v. phr.} Not to hold yourself back from; letyourself enjoy. •/Uncle Willie gave himself up to a life of wandering./•/John came inside from the cold and gave himself up to the pleasure of beingin a warm room./ Compare: ENJOY ONESELF, LET ONESELF GO.
[give one some of his] or [her own medicine] {v. phr.} To treatsomeone the way he or she treats others (used in the negative). •/Thegangster beat up an innocent old man, so when he resisted arrest, a policemangave him a little of his own medicine./
[give one’s due]{v. phr.} To be fair to (a person), give credit that(a person) deserves. •/The boxer who lost gave the new champion his due./•/We should give a good worker his due./ Compare: GIVE THE DEVIL HIS DUE.
[give one’s right arm for]{v. phr.} To give something of great value;sacrifice. •/During our long hike in the desert, I would have given my rightarm for an ice cold drink./
[give one’s word]{v. phr.} To seriously promise. •/"You gave me yourword you would marry me," Mary bitterly complained, "but you broke yourword."/
[give one the eye]{v. phr.}, {slang} 1. To look at, especiallywith interest and liking. •/A pretty girl went by and all the boys gave herthe eye./ 2. To look or stare at, especially in a cold or unfriendly way.•/Mrs. Jones didn’t like Mary and didn’t speak. She just gave her the eyewhen they met on the street./
[give one the works] See: THE WORKS.
[give or take]{v. phr.} To add or subtract. Used with a round numberor date to show how approximate it is. •/The house was built in 1900, give ortake five years./
[give out]{v.} 1. To make known; let it be known; publish. •/Marygave out that she and Bob were going to be married./ 2. To let escape; give.•/The cowboy gave out a yell./ Syn.: GIVE OFF, LET GO. 3. to give topeople; distribute. •/The barber gives out free lollipops to all thechildren./ Compare: HAND OUT, PASS OUT. 4. To fail; collapse. •/Tom’s legsgave out and he couldn’t run any farther./ •/The chair gave out under thefat man./ Compare: WEAR OUT. 5. To be finished or gone. •/When the food atthe party gave out, they bought more./ •/The teacher’s patience gaveout./ Syn.: RUN OUT, RUN SHORT. Compare: USE UP, WEAR OUT. 6. {slang} Notto hold back; act freely; let yourself go. — Often used in the imperative.•/You’re not working hard, Charley. Give out!/ 7. {informal} To showhow you feel. •/When Jane saw the mouse, she gave out with a scream./•/Give out with a little smile./ Compare: LET GO.