or [Sunday best] or [Sunday go-to-meeting
clothes]{n. phr.}, {informal} Best clothes or outfit of clothing.
•/The cowboy got all dressed up in his best bib and tucker to go to the
dance./ •/Mary went to the party in her Sunday best and made a hit with the
boys./ Compare: GLAD RAGS.
[best man]
{n.} The groom’s aid (usually his best friend or a relative)
at a wedding. •/When Agnes and I got married, my brother Gordon was my best
man./
[best seller]
{n.} An item (primarily said of books) that outsells
other items of a similar sort. •/Catherine Neville’s novel "The Eight" has
been a national best seller for months./ •/Among imported European cars,
the Volkswagen is a best seller./
[bet]
See: YOU BET or YOU BET YOUR BOOTS or YOU BET YOUR LIFE.
[be the making of]
{v. phr.} To account for the success of someone or
something. •/The strict discipline that we had to undergo in graduate school
was the making of many a successful professor./ •/The relatively low cost
and high gas mileage are the making of Chevrolet’s Geo Metro cars./
[bet one’s boots]
or [bet one’s bottom dollar] or [bet one’s shirt]{v. phr.}, {informal} 1. To bet all you have. •/This horse will win.
I would bet my bottom dollar on it./ •/Jim said he would bet his boots that
he would pass the examination./ 2. or [bet one’s life]. To feel very
sure; have no doubt. •/Was I scared when I saw the bull running at me? You
bet your life I was!/
[bet on the wrong horse]
{v. phr.}, {informal} To base your plans
on a wrong guess about the result of something; misread the future; misjudge a
coming event. •/To count on the small family farm as an important thing in
the American future now looks like betting on the wrong horse./ •/He
expected Bush to be elected President in 1992 but as it happened, he bet on the
wrong horse./
[better]
See: ALL BETTER, DISCRETION IS THE BETTER PART OF VALOR, FOR
BETTER OR WORSE, FOR THE BETTER, GET THE BETTER OF, GO --- ONE BETTER, HAD
BETTER, HALF A LOAF IS BETTER THAN NONE or HALF A LOAF IS BETTER THAN NO BREAD,
SEE BETTER DAYS, THINK BETTER OF.
[better half]
{n.}, {informal} One’s marriage partner (mostly said
by men about their wives.) •/"This is my better half, Mary," said Joe./
[better late than never]
It is better to come or do something late than
never. •/The firemen didn’t arrive at the house until it was half burned, but
it was better late than never./ •/Grandfather is learning to drive a car.
"Better late than never," he says./ Compare: HALF A LOAF IS BETTER THAN NONE.
[better than]
{prep. phr.} More than; greater than; at a greater rate
than. •/The car was doing better than eighty miles an hour./ •/It is
better than three miles to the station./
[between]
See: BETWIXT AND BETWEEN, COME BETWEEN, PEW AND FAR BETWEEN.
[between a rock and a hard place]
See: BETWEEN THE DEVIL AND THE DEEP BLUE
SEA.
[between life and death]
{adv. phr.} In danger of dying or being
killed; with life or death possible. •/He held on to the mountainside between
life and death while his friends went to get help./ •/The little sick girl
lay all night between life and death until her fever was gone./