bleed someone white
bleed (someone) white
To take all of the money that another person has, often through blackmail. The maid bled her famous employer white until he could no longer pay her the hush money.
See also: bleed, white
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.
bleed someone white
Extort money, take someone's last penny. For example, That contractor would have bled the department white, but fortunately he was apprehended in time . Presumably this term alludes to losing so much blood that one turns pale (and perhaps also to the idea that money is the life blood of commerce). [First half of 1900s]
See also: bleed, someone, white
The American Heritage® Dictionary of Idioms by Christine Ammer.
bleed someone white
and bleed someone dry tv. to take all of someone’s money; to extort money from someone. (see also bleed.) The creeps tried to bleed me white. These taxes are going to bleed me dry!
See also: bleed, someone, white
McGraw-Hill's Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions
bleed someone white, to
To extort money, to take someone’s last penny. The term dates from the seventeenth century. One writer claims it was coined by gamblers; once a victim had been made to pay through the nose (lost all one’s blood through one’s nose), one was bled white. More likely the saying relates to the fact that money was considered the lifeblood of trade and commerce.
See also: bleed, someone
The Dictionary of Clichés by Christine Ammer
- bleed white
- bleed (someone) white
- coerce
- coerce (one) into (something)
- coerce into
- hush fell over
- a hush fell over
- hush-hush
- bleed someone white, to
- hush money