by the skin of your teeth
by the skin of (one's) teeth
Barely. Often used to describe something that almost didn't happen. Oh man, my car wouldn't start this morning—I just made it here by the skin of my teeth!
See also: by, of, skin, teeth
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.
by the skin of your teeth
COMMON If you do something by the skin of your teeth, you just manage to do it but very nearly fail. In the men's First Division, the champions survived by the skin of their teeth. She was there when the fighting started and escaped by the skin of her teeth. Note: This expression seems to come from the book of Job in the Bible, although its meaning has completely changed. Job loses everything and then says `I am escaped with the skin of my teeth' (Job 19:20), meaning that the skin of his teeth is all he has left.
See also: by, of, skin, teeth
Collins COBUILD Idioms Dictionary, 3rd ed.
by the skin of your teeth
by a very narrow margin; only just.See also: by, of, skin, teeth
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary
- get one's teeth into (something), to
- bite on
- bite on (something or someone)
- bite on someone
- cast in (one's) teeth
- cast something in someone's teeth
- grit (one's) teeth
- grit one's teeth
- grit teeth
- grit your teeth