cook goose
cook (one's) goose
To interfere with, disrupt, or ruin something for someone. News of my involvement in this scandal will cook my goose for sure.
See also: cook, goose
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.
cook someone's goose
Fig. to damage or ruin someone. I cooked my own goose by not showing up on time. Sally cooked Bob's goose for treating her the way he did.
See also: cook, goose
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.
cook (one's) goose
Slang To ruin one's chances: The speeding ticket cooked his goose with his father. Her goose was cooked when she was caught cheating on the test.
See also: cook, goose
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition.
cook someone's goose, to
To ruin someone’s undertaking or plan. There are numerous colorful theories about the origin of this term. According to one, the inhabitants of a besieged town in the sixteenth century hung out a goose to show their attackers they were not starving; the enraged enemies then set fire to the town and thus cooked the goose. According to another, the term comes from the fable about the goose that laid golden eggs, which, when the farmer killed it to obtain the gold inside, left him with nothing but a goose to cook. The earliest written records of the term date from the mid-nineteenth century, one being in a street ballad opposing the Pope’s appointment of a particular cardinal (“If they’ll come here we’ll cook their goose, the Pope and Cardinal Wiseman,” 1851).
See also: cook
The Dictionary of Clichés by Christine Ammer
- cook (one's) goose
- cook somebody's goose
- cook someone's goose
- cook your goose
- cook someone's goose, to
- cook up
- cooked up
- cook
- cook out
- cook off