What is the saying about the horse you rode in on?

What is the saying about the horse you rode in on?

The idiom and the horse you rode in on, usually preceded by a far more unfriendly phrase, tends to be directed at someone who’s full of himself and unwelcome to boot. It first pops up in the 1950s, and it’s written on the spine of a book in Donald Regan’s official portrait.

What does the horse you came in on Mean?

A phrase used as an intensifier added after an insult or curse. A: “Nice haircut. What did you use, a weed whacker?” B: “Hey, screw you and the horse you came in on.” See also: and, came, horse, on.

What is the saying about getting back on the horse?

Get back on the horse is an admonition that one must immediately confront a failure and try again. The phrase get back on the horse is the first half of a longer expression, get back on the horse that bucked you or get back on the horse that threw you.

Where did the phrase get off your high horse come from?

The term high horse dates back to medieval times when it was used literally to describe a tall riding horse. The only men who could afford to own and ride great horses or high horses were men of wealth and power. Eventually, the phrase came to mean the attitude assumed by someone who could afford to ride a tall horse.

How do you use and the horse you rode in on?

A phrase used as an intensifier added after an insult or curse. A: “Nice haircut. What did you use, a weed whacker?” B: “Hey, screw you and the horse you rode in on.”

What is the saying rode hard and put away?

(idiomatic) Mistreated; not properly cared for.

What does fell off his high horse mean?

if you tell someone to, or suggest that someone should, get off their high horse, you are suggesting they stop behaving in a superior manner. It is time the community got off its moral high horse and started searching for answers. So come on, John, get off your high horse.

Whats a high horse?

: an arrogant and unyielding mood or attitude.

Why is it bad to put a horse away wet?

Never turn a wet horse out to pasture: when you hose off a hot horse after exercise, the water actually acts as an insulator, trapping heat in the horse’s body.