to knock sth

  • 41knock somebody off their pedestal — knock sb off their ˈpedestal/ˈperch idiom to make sb lose their position as sb/sth successful or admired • A lot of teams are looking to knock us off our perch. Main entry: ↑knockidiom …

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  • 42knock somebody off their perch — knock sb off their ˈpedestal/ˈperch idiom to make sb lose their position as sb/sth successful or admired • A lot of teams are looking to knock us off our perch. Main entry: ↑knockidiom …

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  • 43knock somebody back something — ˌknock sb ˈback sth derived (BrE, informal) to cost sb a lot of money • That house must have knocked them back a bit. Main entry: ↑knockderived …

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  • 44knock somebody out of something — ˌknock sbˈout (of sth) derived to defeat sb so that they cannot continue competing Syn: ↑eliminate • England had been knocked out of the World Cup. see also ↑knockout Main entry: ↑ …

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  • 45knock — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 firm sharp sound ADJECTIVE ▪ loud, sharp ▪ gentle, light, quiet, soft ▪ timid ▪ …

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  • 46knock off — verb 1. get rid of (someone who may be a threat) by killing (Freq. 3) The mafia liquidated the informer the double agent was neutralized • Syn: ↑neutralize, ↑neutralise, ↑liquidate, ↑waste, ↑do in …

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  • 47knock off sth — Ⅰ. UK US knock off (sth) Phrasal Verb with knock({{}}/nɒk/ verb [T] INFORMAL ► to stop working, usually at the end of the day: »I usually try to knock off early on a Friday. »We didn t knock off work until 7:30. Ⅱ. UK US knock off s …

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  • 48knock off — Ⅰ. UK US knock off (sth) Phrasal Verb with knock({{}}/nɒk/ verb [T] INFORMAL ► to stop working, usually at the end of the day: »I usually try to knock off early on a Friday. »We didn t knock off work until 7:30. Ⅱ. UK US knock off s …

    Financial and business terms

  • 49knock sb/sth back — UK US knock sb/sth back Phrasal Verb with knock({{}}/nɒk/ verb [T] ► to have a bad effect on someone or something, especially by stopping them from achieving something: »Disappointing results from the company knocked its shares back to just 51p.… …

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  • 50knock something into shape — lick/knock/whip/ someone/something/into shape phrase to improve the condition or performance of someone or something I’m going to whip this department into shape. Thesaurus: to make something better …

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