give way to
121give in — {v.} To stop fighting or arguing and do as the other person wants; give someone his own way; stop opposing someone. * /Mother kept inviting Mrs. Smith to stay for lunch, and finally she gave in./ * /After Billy proved that he could ride a bicycle …
122give in — {v.} To stop fighting or arguing and do as the other person wants; give someone his own way; stop opposing someone. * /Mother kept inviting Mrs. Smith to stay for lunch, and finally she gave in./ * /After Billy proved that he could ride a bicycle …
123Give 'em hell, kid — «Give em hell, kid» Canción de My Chemical Romance Álbum Three cheers for sweet revenge Publicación 8 de junio de 2004 Grabación …
124give by way of information — index instruct (teach) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …
125Give-away — Give a|way 〈 [gı̣vəwɛı] n.; Gen.: s, Pl.: s〉 Werbegeschenk, kostenlose Warenprobe; ein kleines Give away bekommen [Etym.: <engl. giveaway <give »geben« + away »weg«] …
126give in — give someone his own way, stop opposing someone The company gave in to the union s demand for more money. (from Idioms in Speech) to cease exertions; to confess oneself defeated Well, she ll have a good wait before I call her up. I ve given in… …
127give someone a mouthful — informal phrase to speak to someone in a rude way When I asked her politely to move, she gave me a mouthful. Thesaurus: to insult or offend someonesynonym Main entry: mouthful * * * …
128give someone a taste of their own medicine — give someone a taste/dose/of their own medicine phrase to treat someone in the same bad way that they have treated someone else It’s time those cheats got a taste of their own medicine. Thesaurus: to treat someone in the same bad way they treat… …