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strike one's flag. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
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English
Pronunciation
Verb
strike one's flag (third-person singular simple present strikes one's flag, present participle striking one's flag, simple past struck one's flag, past participle struck one's flag or stricken one's flag)
- (military, especially naval) To take down one's national or other representative flag in order to indicate surrender.
1850, Herman Melville, chapter 74, in White Jacket:At length, having lost her fore and main-top-masts, and her mizzen-mast having been shot away to the deck, . . . the English frigate was reduced to the last extremity. Captain Cardan ordered his signal quarter-master to strike the flag.
1864 February 7, “Very Latest Per Edinburgh”, in New York Times, retrieved 2 July 2015:An Austro-Prussian army of 120.000 men . . . is of itself so imposing a spectacle that one is tempted to believe the little Kingdom of Denmark will strike its flag without firing a shot.
1921, Jeffery Farnol, chapter 12, in Martin Conisby's Vengeance:The enemy having yielded to our mercy and struck their flag, we ceased our fire, and thinking the worst over and done, I watched where Belvedere conned the ship with voice and gesture.
- (idiomatic, by extension) To yield, give up, or surrender.
Synonyms
Translations
to take down one's flag to indicate surrender
Further reading