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mincemeat
make mincemeat (out) of someone
and make hamburger (out) of someoneFig. to beat or pound someone or something; to treat someone or something roughly. (As if chopping someone up.) If you don't behave, I'll make mincemeat out of you. Do you want Fred to make hamburger out of you?
make mincemeat (out) of somebody/something
to destroy or defeat someone or something completely A good lawyer would have made mincemeat of them in court.
Etymology: from the literal meaning of mincemeat (a food in which different things are cut up into very small pieces)
make mincemeat of somebody
(informal) to defeat someone very easily A good lawyer would have made mincemeat of them in court.
make mincemeat of
Also, make hamburger of. Thrash, beat decisively, as in That bully will make mincemeat of my son, or The other team will make hamburger out of us. This idiom alludes to finely chopping up meat. The first term dates from about 1700, the variant from the first half of the 1900s.
make hamburger out of someone/something
and make mincemeat out of someone/something tv. to beat someone or something to a pulp; to destroy someone or something. The puppy made mincemeat out of my paper. Say that again and I’ll make hamburger out of you!
make mincemeat out of someone/something
verb make mincemeat of
Slang To destroy utterly: made mincemeat of the opponent's argument.
Common Names:
Name | Gender | Pronounced | Usage |
Mirjam | | MIR-yahm (German), MEER-yahm (Finnish) | Dutch, German, Finnish, Estonian, Slovene |
Alan | | AL-ən (English) | English, Scottish, Breton, French |
Waldedrudis | | - | Ancient Germanic |
Tineke | | - | Dutch |
EulÀLia | | - | Catalan |
Bohumil | | - | Czech, Slovak |