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stop someone's clock. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
stop someone's clock, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
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English
Verb
stop someone's clock (third-person singular simple present stops someone's clock, present participle stopping someone's clock, simple past and past participle stopped someone's clock)
- (slang) To kill someone.
- Synonyms: see Thesaurus:kill
2004, Bennett Foster, Gila City, page 147:"You wouldn't last thirty minutes if I wasn't behind you," Dandy Bob snapped. "Somebody would stop your clock, only they're afraid of me."
2005, Ralph Compton, Bullet Creek:Navarro aimed his cocked Colt at Homer Winters's fear-etched face. “Come and pick him up before I stop his clock.”
2016, Smiley Bonds, The People’s Hope:I cannot let it stop my clock, I'm far from the end of my road.
- (slang) To clean someone's clock; to make incapable of action; to thwart.
1936, Vincent McHugh, Caleb Catlum's America, page 23:Mom wasn't in no mood for lallygagging and she give him a look that stopped his clock.
1981, James Barnett, The Firing Squad, page 206:Somebody who played a grim little war-game with him; not wanting to kill him, only to kill time, to stop his clock for a couple of hours.
2011, Derek Robinson, Hullo Russia, Goodbye England:“He wasn't going to change his tune,” Tucker said. “So I stopped his clock. Now he knows not to bugger us about.”
2022, Barbara Kingsolver, Demon Copperhead:Those words, from her mouth, stopped my clock.
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see stop, clock.
2015, Andy Soltis, Chess Lists, page 11:Yet when Garry Kasparov failed to stop his clock after making a move in a World Championship match, it was his opponent, Anatoly Karpov, who was criticized for failing to alert him.