drop the gloves
English
Etymology
From the practice of ice hockey players of removing their heavy gloves before striking blows in fistfights
Pronunciation
Audio (AU) (file)
Verb
- (Canada and US, ice hockey, idiomatic) To fight.
- 2007 March 27, Mike Brophy, "Getting rid of the goons," Globe and Mail (Canada) (retrieved 14 Oct 2008):
- Nobody used to care when players such as John Ferguson, Bobby Orr, Gordie Howe and Maurice Richard dropped the gloves, because they could play the game, too.
- 2007 March 27, Mike Brophy, "Getting rid of the goons," Globe and Mail (Canada) (retrieved 14 Oct 2008):
- (Canada and US, idiomatic, by extension) To remove a prior impediment to action; to prepare for or engage in a dispute.
- 2000 Jan. 30, Thomas DeFrank et al., "George W. & Al Bank on Bubba," New York Daily News (retrieved 14 Oct 2008):
- But Bradley, who dropped the gloves on Gore in a combative debate Wednesday night and called the vice president chronically dishonest, ignored Sullivan's advice.
- 2000 Jan. 30, Thomas DeFrank et al., "George W. & Al Bank on Bubba," New York Daily News (retrieved 14 Oct 2008):
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