buy the rabbit
English
Etymology
According to Hotten: from an old story about a man selling a cat to a foreigner as a rabbit.
Verb
buy the rabbit (third-person singular simple present buys the rabbit, present participle buying the rabbit, simple past and past participle bought the rabbit)
- (UK, slang, archaic) To get the worst of a bargain.
- 1895, Horace White, Money and Banking (page 253)
- This is ruffian-like, by superiority of numbers to endeavor to make honest people buy the rabbit.
- 1895, Horace White, Money and Banking (page 253)
References
- 1873, John Camden Hotten, The Slang Dictionary