a head and per head [for] a person; [for]
an individual. (Also used for cattle.)
How much do you charge per head for din-
ner? It costs four dollars a head.
head and shoulders above someone or
something clearly superior to someone or
something. (Often with stand, as in the
example.) This wine is head and shoul-
ders above that one. John stands head
and shoulders above Bob.
head for someone or something to aim for or
move toward someone or something.
She waved good-bye as she headed for the
door. Ann came in and headed for her
mother.
head for the last roundup to reach the
end of something. (Originally said of a
dying cowboy.) This ballpoint pen is
headed for the last roundup. I have to get
another one. I am so weak. I think I’m
headed for the last roundup.
head over heels in debt deeply in debt.
Finally, when she was head over heels in
debt, she tore up her credit cards. I
couldn’t stand being head over heels in
debt, so I always pay off my bills
immediately.
head over heels in love (with someone)
very much in love with someone. (See
also fall head over heels in love (with
someone).) John is head over heels in love
with Mary. They are head over heels in
head someone or something off to prevent
someone or something from arriving.
The doctors worked round the clock to
head the epidemic off. Bill headed his
mother off so that we had time to clean
up the mess before she saw it. T The
farmer headed off the herd of sheep before
it ruined our picnic.
head something up to serve as leader or head
of something. I had already agreed to
head the fund-raising campaign up. T
They asked me to head up the meeting.
heads or tails the face of a coin or the
other side of a coin. (Often used in an act
of coin tossing, where one circumstance
is valid if the front of a coin appears and
another circumstance is valid if the other
side appears.) Jim looked at Jane as he
f lipped the coin into the air. “Heads or
tails?” he asked. It doesn’t matter
whether the result of the toss is heads or
tails. I won’t like the outcome in any case.
Heads up! Raise your head from work and
look around you carefully for informa-
tion, danger, or warnings that you need
to see! Heads up! Watch out for that
door! Heads up! There is a car coming.
heads will roll someone will get into se-
vere trouble. (Informal.) When the
company’s year-end results are known,
heads will roll. Heads will roll when the
principal sees the damaged classroom.
hear a peep out of someone to get some
sort of a response from someone; to hear
the smallest word from someone. (Usu-
ally in the negative.) I don’t want to
hear another peep out of you. I didn’t
know they were there. I didn’t hear a peep
out of them.
hear of something to tolerate something; to
permit something. (Usually negative.)
No, you cannot go to the movies! I won’t
hear of it! My mother wouldn’t hear of
my marrying Bill.
heart and soul the central core [of some-
one or something]. (Also literal.) My
very heart and soul was made sad by her
hurtful attitude. Now we are getting to
the heart and soul of the matter. This
feature is the heart and soul of my
invention.
[heart goes out to someone] Go to one’s
heart goes out to someone.
[heart is in one’s mouth] Go to one’s heart
is in one’s mouth.
[heart is in the right place] Go to one’s
heart is in the right place.
[heart is (dead) set against something] Go
to one’s heart is (dead) set against some-
thing.
[heart is set on something] Go to one’s heart
is set on something.
[heart misses a beat] Go to one’s heart
misses a beat.
[heart skips a beat] Go to one’s heart skips
a beat.
[heart stands still] Go to one’s heart stands
still.
heavy going difficult to do, understand, or
make progress with. (Informal.) Jim
finds math heavy going. Talking to
Mary is heavy going. She has nothing to
say.
hedge one’s bets to reduce one’s loss on a
bet or on an investment by counterbal-
ancing the loss in some way. (Slang.)
Bob bet Ann that the plane would be late.
He usually hedges his bets. This time he
called the airline and asked about the
plane before he made the bet. John
bought some stock and then bet Mary that
the stock would go down in value in one
year. He has hedged his bets perfectly. If the
stock goes up, he sells it, pays off Mary, and
still makes a profit. If it goes down, he re-
duces his loss by winning the bet he made
with Mary.
hell on earth a very unpleasant situation,
as if one were in hell. That man made
my life hell on earth! The whole time I
was there was just hell on earth.
help do something to assist [someone to] do
something. Bill can help load the truck.
I am too tired to help mow the grass.
Bill can help us load the truck. I am too
tired to help you mow the grass.
help oneself to take whatever one wants or
needs. Please have some candy. Help
yourself. When you go to a cafeteria, you
help yourself to the food. Bill helped
himself to dessert.
help (someone or something) out (with some-
one or something) to assist (someone or
something) with a person or a thing.
Can you help me out with my geometry?
Yes, I can help out. T Please help out my
son with his geometry. Please help me
out around the house. T We helped out the
school with its fund-raising.
hem and haw (around) to be uncertain
about something; to be evasive; to say
“ah” and “eh” when speaking—avoiding
saying something meaningful. (Folksy.)
Stop hemming and hawing around. I
want an answer. Don’t just hem and
haw around. Speak up. We want to hear
what you think.
hem someone or something in to trap or en-
close someone or something. The large
city buildings hem me in. T Don’t hem in
the bird. Let it have a way to escape.
the here and now the present, as opposed
to the past or the future. I don’t care
what’s happening tomorrow or next week!
I care about the here and now. The past
is dead. Let’s worry about the here and
now.
here and there at this place and that; from
place to place. (Could imply a casual
search. See also here, there, and every-
where; hither and thither.) We find rare
books in used-book stores here and there.
She didn’t make a systematic search. She
just looked here and there.
Here goes nothing. I am beginning to do
something that will probably fail or be
poorly done. (Informal.) Sally stood on
the diving board and said, “Here goes
nothing.” As Ann walked onto the stage,
she whispered, “Here goes nothing.”
Here (it) goes. Something is going to start.;
I will start now.; I will do it now. (Infor-
mal or slang.) I’m ready to start now.
Here goes. Okay, it’s my turn to kick the
ball. Here it goes!
here, there, and everywhere everywhere;
at all points. (See also hither, thither, and
yon. Compare this with here and there.)
Fred searched here, there, and every-
where, frantically looking for the lost check.
She did not rest until she had been here,
there, and everywhere, shopping for just
the right gift.
Here you go. and There you go. Here is
what you asked for. (Informal.) “Here
you go,” said the waiter as he put the plate
on the table. There you go. Here is your
hamburger and your drink.
Here’s looking at you. Drink up. (A sim-
ple drinking toast.) Here’s look at you,
Tom. Thanks for the drink. Here’s look-
ing at you.
Here’s mud in your eye. Drink up! (A
simple and jocular drinking toast.)
Here’s mud in your eye, Tom. Thanks
for the drink. Here’s mud in your eye.
Here’s to someone or something. <an expres-
sion used as a toast to someone or some-
thing to wish someone or something
well.> Here’s to Jim and Mary! May
they be very happy! Here’s to your new
job!
hide-and-seek a guessing game where one
has to find something or figure out some-
thing that is concealed or disguised.
(Refers to a game where a person hides
and another person tries to find the hid-
den person.) I am tired of running up
against a game of hide-and-seek every
time I ask to see the financial records of
this company. I have been trying to see
the manager for two days. Where is she? I
refuse to play hide-and-seek any longer. I
want to see her now!
hide one’s face in shame to cover one’s
face because of shame or embarrassment.
Mary was so embarrassed. She could
only hide her face in shame. When Tom
broke Ann’s crystal vase, he wanted to hide
his face in shame.
hide one’s head in the sand Go to bury
one’s head in the sand.
hide one’s light under a bushel to conceal
one’s good ideas or talents. (A biblical
theme.) Jane has some good ideas, but
she doesn’t speak very often. She hides her
light under a bushel. Don’t hide your
light under a bushel. Share your gifts with
other people.
high and dry 1. safe; unbothered by diffi-
culties; unscathed. (Refers to being safe
from a flood.) While the riot was go-
ing on, I was high and dry in my apart-
ment. Liz came out of the argument
high and dry. 2. abandoned; unsupported
and helpless. (See also leave someone high
and dry.) Everyone else on the commit-
tee quit, leaving me high and dry. The
company moved to Chicago, and I was left
high and dry in Dallas.
high-and-mighty self-important and arro-
gant. I don’t know why Albert is so high-
and-mighty. He’s no better than the rest
of us. The boss acts high-and-mighty
because he can fire us all.
high as a kite Go to (as) high as a kite.
high man on the totem pole the person
at the top of the hierarchy; the person in
charge of an organization. (Informal.
Compare this with low man on the totem
pole.) I don’t want to talk to a secretary.
I demand to talk to the high man on the
totem pole. Who’s in charge around
here? Who’s high man on the totem pole?
highflier a person who is ambitious or who
is very likely to be successful. (Informal.)
Jack was one of the highfliers of our uni-
versity year, and he is now in the foreign
office. Tom is a highf lier and has ap-
plied for the post of managing director.
hightail it out of somewhere to run or ride
a horse away from somewhere fast.
(Folksy. Typically heard in western
movies.) Here comes the sheriff. We’d
better hightail it out of here. Look at
that guy go. He really hightailed it out of
town.
highways and byways [all the] roads; the
major and minor roads and routes. (Both
literal and figurative.) I hope I meet you
again some day on life’s highways and by-
ways. The city council voted to plant
new trees along all the highways and by-
ways of the town.
hinge on something to depend on some-
thing. This all hinges on how much risk
you’re willing to take. Whether we have
the picnic hinges on the weather.
hit a happy medium Go to strike a happy
medium.
hit-and-miss and hit-or-miss carelessly;
aimlessly; without plan or direction.
There was no planning. It was just hit-
and-miss. We handed out the free tick-
ets hit-or-miss. Some people got one; oth-
ers got five or six.
hit-and-run an accident where the driver
of a car strikes a person or another ve-
hicle and speeds away without admitting
to the deed or stopping to help. Fred
was injured in a hit-and-run accident.
The state passed a law making any kind
of hit-and-run accident a felony.
hit a plateau to reach a higher level of ac-
tivity, sales, production, output, etc., and
then stop and remain unchanged.
When my sales hit a plateau, my boss gave
me a pep talk. When production hit a
plateau, the company built a new factory.
hit a sour note Go to strike a sour note.
hit bottom to reach the lowest or worst
point. Our profits have hit bottom. This
is our worst year ever. When my life hit
bottom, I began to feel much better. I knew
that if there was going to be any change,
it would be for the better.
hit home and strike home to really make
sense; [for a comment] to make a very
good point. Mary’s criticism of my
clothes hit home, so I changed. The
teacher’s comment struck home and the
student vowed to work harder.
hit it off (with someone) to quickly become
good friends with someone. Look how
John hit it off with Mary. Yes, they really
hit it off.
hit one close to home Go to hit one where
one lives.
hit one’s stride Go to reach one’s stride.
hit one where one lives and hit one close
to home to affect one personally and in-
timately. (Informal.) Her comments
really hit me where I live. Her words
seemed to apply directly to me. I listened
carefully and didn’t think she hit close to
home at all.
hit-or-miss Go to hit-and-miss.
hit pay dirt to discover something of value.
(Slang. Refers to discovering valuable
ore.) Sally tried a number of different
jobs until she hit pay dirt. I tried to bor-
row money from a lot of different people.
They all said no. Then when I went to the
bank, I hit pay dirt.
hit (someone) below the belt to do some-
thing unfair or unsporting to someone.
(Informal. From boxing, where a blow
below the belt line is not permitted.)
You really hit me below the belt when you
told the boss about my tax problems. In
business Bill is difficult to deal with. He
hits below the belt.
hit (someone) like a ton of bricks to sur-
prise, startle, or shock someone. (Also lit-
eral. Informal.) Suddenly, the truth hit
me like a ton of bricks. The sudden tax
increase hit like a ton of bricks. Everyone
became angry.
hit someone (right) between the eyes to
become completely apparent; to surprise
or impress someone. (Also literal. Infor-
mal.) Suddenly, it hit me right between
the eyes. John and Mary were in love.
Then—as he was talking—the exact na-
ture of the evil plan hit me between the
eyes.
hit someone up (for something) to ask some-
one for something. (Informal.) John hit
me up for a loan. T I told him to go hit
up someone else.
hit the books to begin to study; to study.
(Slang.) Well, time to hit the books.
John, if you don’t start hitting the books,
you’re going to fail.
hit the bottle to drink alcohol to excess.
(As if drinking directly from the bottle,
that is, taking a hit from the bottle.
Slang.) Fred goes home and hits the bot-
tle every night. Bill has been hitting the
bottle a lot lately. I think he has a problem.
hit the bricks to start walking; to go out
into the streets. (Slang.) If you want
to get a job, you had better get out there
and hit the bricks. I got fired today. The
boss came by and told me to hit the bricks.
hit the bull’s-eye to achieve a goal per-
fectly. (Refers to hitting the center of a
circular target. Informal.) Your idea
really hit the bull’s-eye. Thank you! Jill
has a lot of insight. She knows how to hit
the bull’s-eye in discussions.
hit the ceiling to become very angry. (Also
literal. Informal.) My father hit the ceil-
ing when I damaged the car. Our em-
ployer hit the ceiling when we lost an im-
portant contract.
hit the high spots to do only the impor-
tant, obvious, or good things. (Informal.)
I won’t discuss the entire report. I’ll just
hit the high spots. First, let me hit the
high spots; then I’ll tell you about
everything.
hit the jackpot 1. to win at gambling.
(Refers to the “jack” in playing cards.)
Bob hit the jackpot three times in one
night. I’ve never hit the jackpot even
once. 2. to have a success. I hit the jack-
pot on a business deal. I really hit the
jackpot in the library. I found just what I
needed.
hit the nail (right) on the head to do ex-
actly the right thing; to do something in
the most effective and efficient way; to
identify the exact nature of something.
(Also literal.) You’ve spotted the f law,
Sally. You hit the nail on the head. Bob
doesn’t say much, but every now and then
he hits the nail right on the head.
hit the road to depart; to begin one’s jour-
ney, especially on a road trip; to leave for
home. It’s time to hit the road. I’ll see
you. We have to hit the road very early
in the morning.
hit the sack Go to hit the hay.
hit the skids to decline; to decrease in
value. (Slang.) Business usually hits the
skids in the summer. Tom hit the skids
after he lost his job.
hit the spot to be exactly right; to be re-
freshing. (Informal.) This cool drink
really hits the spot. That was a delicious
meal, dear. It hit the spot.
hit (up)on something to discover or think up
something. (Informal.) Ann hit on the
idea of baking lots of bread and freezing it.
John hit upon a new way of planting
corn.
No comments:
Post a Comment