bang in

bang in

1. To strike and dent something. That rogue shopping cart banged in the passenger side door of my car.
2. To score a goal. Their goalie made the initial save, but our trailing defenseman banged in the rebound.
See also: bang

bang in (sick)

To inform one's employer that one will be absent due to illness (real or feigned). That virus has totally decimated my staff—only two people are in the office today because the rest banged in sick! If you really want to go to the beach tomorrow, just bang in.
See also: bang
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

bang something in

to crush something; to dent or collapse something. Who banged the side of the washing machine in? Who banged in the side of the washing machine?
See also: bang
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.

bang in

verb
See bang in sick
See also: bang
McGraw-Hill's Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions
See also:
  • bang in (sick)
  • bash up
  • dent up
  • dent
  • bash in
  • bump up
  • hammer at
  • hammer at (something)
  • put the cart before the horse
  • cart before the horse, put the
References in periodicals archive
Coarse fishing remains upbeat in the region with the Aldin Grange fishery at Bear Park and Wadsworth and Shotton fisheries both bang in form for County Durham anglers.
And Guest showed that his stable is bang in form when Polished scored at Newcastle yesterday.