hand someone his hat
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English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Audio (General Australian): (file)
Verb
[edit]hand someone his hat (third-person singular simple present hands someone his hat, present participle handing someone his hat, simple past and past participle handed someone his hat)
- (chiefly US, idiomatic) To require someone to depart; to dismiss someone.
- 1948 November 27, Drew Pearson, “The Washington Merry-go-round”, in Ludington Daily News, US, retrieved 10 November 2015, page 4:
- McNeil replied, "It may have been Hitler who helped Chamberlain with his overcoat but don't forget it was the British people who handed him his hat."
- 1972 July 25, Bob Considine, “Letter to Kremlin”, in Reading Eagle, US, retrieved 10 November 2015, page 4:
- You grew up under dictators who would have put people to the sword if they dared hand them their hats and invite them to buzz off.
- 1984 February 6, Mary McGrory, “Feldstein doggedly speaks his mind”, in Eugene Register-Guard, US, retrieved 10 November 2015, page 15A:
- The President's men, nonetheless, view him the way the Vatican saw Galileo—as a dangerous heretic. . . . They would hand him his hat if they dared.
Usage notes
[edit]- Sometimes used in the alternative passive voice forms: have one's hat handed to one or get one's hat handed to one.