All in, be
be tired out, exhausted, as in i can’t walk another step; i’m all in. [ ; second half of 1800s ]
in card games, especially poker, be out of money, as in i’m finished for the night; i’m all in. it refers to having put all of one’s money in the pot. in his historical dictionary of slang, j.e. lighter suggests that the gambling usage, first recorded in 1907, may be the source of the first sense.
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something that is ; purpose; design; : the original intent of the committee was to raise funds. the act or fact of , as to do something: criminal intent. law. the state of a person’s mind that directs his or her actions toward a specific object. meaning or significance. to / for all intents and […]
- Alliterate
to show : in “round and round the rugged rock the ragged rascal ran,” the “r” alliterates. to use : swinburne often alliterates. to compose or arrange with : he alliterates the “w’s” in that line. historical examples members of the families in beowulf which we have reason to think historic bear names which alliterate […]
- Alliterative
pertaining to or characterized by : alliterative verse. contemporary examples “more mitt,” as politico reported at least has the virtue of alliterative succinctness. how mitt romney can win the first debate with obama robert shrum september 24, 2012 like sigurd and gudrún, the fall of arthur is in alliterative verse, a mode last fashionable in […]
- All joking aside
also, all kidding aside. seriously, as in i know i said i’d quit, but all joking aside this job is too much for one person, or all kidding aside, i hate to lose at croquet. this phrase often accompanies a joking statement.
- All like that there
all like that there noun phrase other such things; etcetera: they sold boots and shoes and all like that there