foot the bill
Related to foot the bill: or else
foot the bill
To pay for something. I hope the production company is footing the bill for all of this air travel.
See also: bill, foot
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.
foot the bill (for something)
Fig. to pay for something; to pay for a bill. My boss took me out for lunch and the company footed the bill. You paid for dinner last time. Let me foot the bill for lunch today.
See also: bill, foot
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.
foot the bill
Pay the bill, settle the accounts, as in The bride's father was resigned to footing the bill for the wedding. This expression uses foot in the sense of "add up and put the total at the foot, or bottom, of an account." [Colloquial; early 1800s]
See also: bill, foot
The American Heritage® Dictionary of Idioms by Christine Ammer.
foot the bill
COMMON If you foot the bill for something, you pay for it. Police will have to foot the bill for the damage to both cars. If the insurance industry were to foot the entire bill for pollution, it would bankrupt it. Note: This expression may come from the practice of someone paying a bill and signing it at the bottom, or `foot'.
See also: bill, foot
Collins COBUILD Idioms Dictionary, 3rd ed.
foot the bill
be responsible for paying for something.See also: bill, foot
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary
foot the ˈbill (for something)
be responsible for paying the cost of something: The local council will have to foot the bill for damage done to the roads in last years’s floods.See also: bill, foot
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary
- footing
- the Old Bill
- on (one's) bill
- pick up the bill
- fill the bill
- fill the bill, to
- can't fight City Hall, one/you/they
- greenback
- We were just talking about you
- meet one's Waterloo, to