do we have to go through
111through thick and thin — in all situations, especially the most difficult ones My friends have stood by me through thick and thin …
112through, be — 1. Be finished. 2. be through with Refuse to have anything more to do with …
113have shit thrown at smb. through a fly-wire door — Australian Slang have a lot of freckles …
114have (someone) over — vb British a. to trick, dupe, deceive. A working class euphemism related to the colloquialism get one over on (someone) . Similar themes run through stories about social workers who are reckoned to be easily had over by villains and even by… …
115have a hard-on — tv. to have an erect penis. (The most common colloquial expression for this state. See also hard on. Usually objectionable.) □ I had a hard on through the whole movie …
116through-composed — adjective Of a song, composed so that each stanza may have different music, rather than the same being repeated for all of them. Ant: strophic …
117have done — (Roget s IV) v. Syn. leave, quit, outgrow, stop, get through, finish; see also achieve 1 , stop 2 …
118have no business doing something — to do something you should not do, because it does not affect or involve you at all You had no business going through my private papers …
119have it out — idi to reach an understanding through fighting or intense discussion …
120have the best — verb overcome, usually through no fault or weakness of the person that is overcome Heart disease can get the best of us • Syn: ↑get the best, ↑overcome • Hypernyms: ↑beat, ↑beat out, ↑crush, ↑shell, ↑ …