Informal way to say, "excellent; correct." •/"First
we’ll go up the Sears Tower, and then we’ll take a night sightseeing tour on
the lake," Fran said. "That’s the ticket!" Stan, an old inhabitant of Chicago,
replied./
[That’s the way the ball bounces]
or [the cookie crumbles!] Nothing
unusual about that. — Said of unpleasant things. •/"Susan left me for a
heavyweight boxer, and then I got drunk and wrecked my car," Bob bitterly
complained. "Well, that’s the way the cookie crumbles," Pam answered
philosophically./
[theater]
See: LITTLE THEATER.
[the business]
{n.}, {slang} — Usually used with "give" or "get".
1. All that you are able to do; greatest effort. •/Johnny gave the tryouts
the business but he failed to make the team./ 2. The most harm possible; the
greatest damage or hurt. •/Fred got the business when Tom caught him with his
bicycle./ 3. A harsh scolding. •/The teacher gave Walter the business when
he came to school late again./ •/Mike thought he was the star of the team
until he got the business from the coach./ Compare: THE WORKS.
[The cat did it!]
A humorous and convenient way to pass the blame. •/"My
vase is broken!" Mother shrieked in horror. "Well," Dad smirked cynically, "I
guess the cat did it!"/
[the creeps]
{n.}, {informal} 1. An uncomfortable tightening of the
skin caused by fear or shock. •/Reading the story of a ghost gave Joe the
creeps./ •/The queer noises in the old house gave Mary the creeps./ 2. A
strong feeling of fear or disgust. •/The cold, damp, lonely swamp gave John
the creeps./ •/The dog was so ugly it gave Mary the creeps./
[the devil to pay]
{n. phr.} A severe penalty. •/If we don’t finish
the work by next Monday, there will be the devil to pay./
[the edge]
{n.}, {informal} The advantage. — Usually used in the
phrases "get the edge on", "have the edge on". •/In the last quarter of the
game, our team got the edge on the other team and kept it./ •/Mary has the
edge on Jane in the beauty contest./
[the fickle finger of fate]
See: ACT OF GOD.
[the idea]
or [the very idea]{n. phr.} — Used in exclamations to
show that you do not like something. •/The idea! Thinking Mother was my
sister!/ •/The very idea of Tom bringing that dirty dog into my clean
house!/
[the lid]
{n.}, {slang} Something that holds back or holds out of
sight. •/The police blew the lid off the gambling operations./ •/John
kept the lid on his plans until he was ready to run for class president./
•/The chief of police placed the lid on gambling in the town./
[the likes of]
{informal} Something like or similar to; something of
the same kind as. •/I have never seen the likes of John./ •/It was a
chocolate sundae the likes of which Mary would never see again./
[the long and the short]
or [the long and short]{n. phr.} All that
needs to be said; the basic fact; point. •/The long and the short of the
matter is that the man is no actor./ •/The money isn’t there, and that’s
the long and short of it./