stand up and be counted

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English

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Verb

stand up and be counted (third-person singular simple present stands up and is counted, present participle standing up and being counted, simple past stood up and was counted, past participle stood up and been counted)

  1. (idiomatic) To publicly make known one's views, contributions, or vote, especially in a contentious situation where fortitude is required.
    • 1960 October 24, “Foreign News: A New Look at Neutralism”, in Time, retrieved 5 November 2016:
      Only four years ago many a small nation felt required to stand up and be counted, either for or against the U.S.
    • 1981 Nov. 25, UPI, "‘Miami's for Me’ Slogan Aims at a Better Image," New York Times (retrieved 5 Nov 2016):
      "We're here because we're willing to stand up and be counted and we're willing to do something about the problems of this community."
    • 2016 January 12, Lucy Gorman, “Voices: Queer Christians like me deserve to pray without prejudice”, in Independent, UK, retrieved 5 November 2016:
      s an LGBT community we need to stand up and be counted, and force people into action by holding our ground on the importance of inclusion in the church.
    • 2025 June 14, Christopher Mathias, “JD Vance threatened to deport him. The ‘menswear guy’ is posting through it”, in The Guardian, →ISSN:
      In recent weeks they appeared to ramp up this ethno-nationalist project, with disturbing footage emerging online of masked, heavily armed Ice and DHS agents abducting Latino people from schools and courthouses, or kidnapping them off the streets, often separating them from their children. Guy felt compelled to stand up and be counted.
  2. (idiomatic, often sports) To take significant individual action to help a group effort.

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