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streak
curse a blue streak
To use profane language with great rapidity and intensity. My dad cursed a blue streak after he found out I'd put a dent in his car.
swear a blue streak
To use profane language with great rapidity and intensity. My dad swore a blue streak after he found out I'd put a dent in his car.
blue streak
Something that moves very quickly and unceasingly. A: "Could you follow what Rob said?" B: "Not at all. The way he talks a blue streak, I couldn't keep up!"
like a streak
Very quickly. Once I saw that swarm of bees, I took off like a streak in the opposite direction.
cuss a blue streak
Rur. to curse a great deal. When she dropped the brick on her toe, she cussed a blue streak. Bill could cuss a blue streak by the time he was eight years old.
have a yellow belly
and have a yellow streak down one's backFig. to be cowardly. Tex has a yellow streak down his back a mile wide. He's afraid to cross the street!
like greased lightning
Rur. very fast. Once I get her tuned up, this old car will go like greased lightning. He's a fat kid, but he can run like greased lightning.
*losing streak
Fig. a series of losses [in sports, for instance]. (*Typically: be on ~; have ~; continue one's ~.) The team was on a losing streak that started nearly three years ago.
*lucky streak
and *streak of luckFig. a series of lucky wins in gambling or games. (*Typically: be on ~; have ~.) Thanks to a lucky streak, I won enough in Las Vegas to pay for the trip.
mean streak
Fig. a tendency for a person to do things that are mean. I think that Wally has a mean streak that no one ever saw before this incident.
streak across something
to move across something very fast. A comet streaked across the night sky. Tom streaked across the street to get a cup of coffee.
streak of bad luck
and string of bad lucka series of events that are only bad luck. After a long string of bad luck, we finally got a lucky break.
streak of good luck
and string of good luck a series of fortunate events. After a series of failures, we started out on a streak of good luck.
talk a blue streak
Fig. to talk very much and very rapidly. Billy didn't talk until he was two, and then he started talking a blue streak. I can't understand anything Bob says. He talks a blue streak, and I can't follow his thinking.
yellow streak (down someone's back)
a tendency toward cowardice. Tim's got a yellow streak down his back a mile wide. Get rid of that yellow streak. Show some courage.
like greased lightning
(old-fashioned) if someone does something like greased lightning, they do it very quickly I mentioned work and he was out of the room like greased lightning.
talk a blue streak
(American) to say a lot very fast She talked a blue streak and we just had to listen.
like greased lightning
Also, like a blue streak; like the wind; like blazes. Very fast indeed, as in He climbed that ladder like greased lightning, or She kept on talking like a blue streak, or The children ran like the wind when they heard there'd be free ice cream. The likening of speed to lightning dates from the 1500s, and grease was added in the early 1800s to further accentuate the idea of haste. The first variant, blue streak, also dates from the early 1800s and alludes to something resembling lightning. The wind in the second variant has been a metaphor for swiftness since ancient Roman times. The blazes in the last variant, first recorded in 1925, alludes to fire or lightning.
talk someone's arm off
Also,
talk someone's ear or head or pants off ;
talk a blue streak;
talk until one is blue in the face;
talk the bark off a tree or the hind leg off a donkey or horse . Talk so much as to exhaust the listener, as in
Whenever I run into her she talks my arm off, or
Louise was so excited that she talked a blue streak, or
You can talk the bark off a tree but you still won't convince me. The first four expressions imply that one is so bored by a person's loquacity that one's arm (or ear or head or pants) fall off; they date from the first half of the 1900s (also see
pants off). The term
like a blue streak alone simply means "very quickly," but in this idiom, first recorded in 1914, it means "continuously." The obvious hyperboles implying
talk that takes
the bark off a tree, first recorded in 1831, or
the hind leg off a horse, from 1808, are heard less often today. Also see under
blue in the face.
winning streak
A series of consecutive successes, a run of good luck, as in Our son-in-law has been on a winning streak with his investments. This expression comes from gambling. [Mid-1900s]
have a yellow streak down one’s back
tv. to be cowardly. (Have got can replace have.) wrong. If you have a yellow streak down your back, you don’t take many risks.
streak
1. in. to move rapidly from one place to another. The train streaked into the station and came to a stop just inches from the end of the track.
2. in. to run about in a public place naked. This kid was streaking back and forth until the cops caught him.
3. tv. to grace or ornament a public place or event with a naked run. Charles streaked the baseball game, but nobody noticed him.
4. n. a naked run in a public place. (see also
streaker.)
There was a streak at the end of the game, but people were leaving then and didn’t see it. 5. n. an exciting time; a wild party. We had a streak at Tom’s.
talk a blue streak
tv. to talk fast or a lot. Some parrots never talk. Others talk a blue streak whenever it’s light.