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on a tear. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
on a tear, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
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English
Pronunciation
Prepositional phrase
on a tear
- (idiomatic) Engaged in a continuous, fast-paced procession of actions or events, especially with favorable results.
1981 April 13, “Sport: Raging Bull of Basketball”, in Time, retrieved 28 August 2015:[T]he team was on a tear, having laid waste to three early round tournament opponents by a total victory margin of 82 points.
2014 November 7, Dan Hardy, “Michael Bisping analysis”, in Independent, UK, retrieved 28 August 2015:To say he went on a tear after turning professional would be an understatement. He went fourteen fights without tasting defeat.
- (idiomatic) In or into a protracted state of agitation, fury, or zeal.
- (idiomatic) Binge drinking; engaged in a bout of heavy consumption of alcoholic beverages; on a bender.
2013, T. C. Boyle, T.C. Boyle Stories II: The Collected Stories of T. Coraghessan Boyle, →ISBN:The man I want to tell you about, the one I met at the bar at Jimmy's Steak House, was on a tear. Hardly surprising, since this was a bar, after all, and what do people do at bars except drink, and one drink leads to another -- and if you're in a certain frame of mind, I suppose, you don't stop for a day or two or maybe more.
1998, Dana Stabenow, Fire and Ice, page 77:That Kelly, when he goes on a tear, he don't wait for the bars to open.
Usage notes
- In the sense of "engaged in a fast-paced procession of actions", often used with reference to a series of successes in sporting competitions.
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