hasty

beat a (hasty) retreat

To leave a place or situation quickly. I beat a hasty retreat when I saw my ex-boyfriend walk into the party. When the rain started, everyone on the field beat a retreat indoors.
See also: beat, retreat
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

beat a (hasty) retreat

to withdraw from a place very quickly. We went out into the cold weather, but beat a retreat to the warmth of our fire. The dog beat a hasty retreat to its own yard.
See also: beat, retreat
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.

beat a retreat

Also, beat a hasty retreat. Reverse course or withdraw, usually quickly. For example, I really don't want to run into Jeff-let's beat a retreat. This term originally (1300s) referred to the military practice of sounding drums to call back troops. Today it is used only figuratively, as in the example above.
See also: beat, retreat
The American Heritage® Dictionary of Idioms by Christine Ammer.

beat a hasty retreat

If you beat a hasty retreat, you leave a place quickly in order to avoid an embarrassing or dangerous situation. Cockburn decided it was time to beat a hasty retreat. Note: People sometimes just say that someone beats a retreat. I can still beat a retreat to my own hotel, and pretend that none of this ever happened. Note: Other adjectives such as quick and rapid are sometimes used instead of hasty. You weren't tempted to change your mind and beat a quick retreat?
See also: beat, hasty, retreat
Collins COBUILD Idioms Dictionary, 3rd ed.

beat a hasty retreat

withdraw, typically in order to avoid something unpleasant.
In former times, a drumbeat could be used to keep soldiers in step while they were retreating.
See also: beat, hasty, retreat
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary

beat a (hasty) reˈtreat

go away quickly from somebody/something: I had a terrible headache from all the noise and smoke at the party, so my wife and I beat a hasty retreat.In the past, the beat of a drum was sometimes used to keep soldiers marching in the same rhythm when they were retreating (= moving away from the enemy).
See also: beat, retreat
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary

beat a retreat

To make a hasty withdrawal.
See also: beat, retreat
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition.

beat a (hasty/quick) retreat, to

To withdraw, back down, or reverse course, usually without delay. The term comes from the military practice of sounding drums to recall troops behind the lines, or to some other position. In earlier days wind instruments, most often trumpets, were used for this purpose. Among the references to this practice is “Thai had blawen the ratret,” in John Barbour’s The Bruce (1375). Much later the expression was used figuratively to mean the same as the simple verb to retreat, and then, in the mid-nineteenth century, it became a cliché. A newer version is to beat a strategic retreat, basically a euphemism for a forced withdrawal. It came into use during World War I, as the German high command’s explanation of retiring from the Somme in 1917. In the civilian vocabulary, it came to mean yielding a point or backing down from a position in an argument.
See also: beat
The Dictionary of Clichés by Christine Ammer
See also:
  • beat a hasty retreat
  • beat a retreat
  • beat a (hasty) retreat
  • retreat
  • beat a (hasty/quick) retreat, to
  • go hell for leather
  • hell for leather
  • hell-bent for leather
  • absent (oneself) from
  • have a run-in
References in periodicals archive
An earlier version of this paper was delivered as a response to Christopher Hasty's keynote address at the Stefan Wolpe Festival at the Northwestern University School of Music, November, 2001.
''History has taught us to act with caution because any hasty senseless blunder can lead to loss of hard-earned independence,'' Than Shwe said.
Thus, it is essential that an aviation LNO be working with the infantry battalion staff at the battalion's TOC throughout the compressed planning phase and throughout the execution of the hasty air assault.
The next day, Hasty appeared at the courthouse to serve the judge and opposing counsel with motions for The Observer to intervene in the case and to open the Virmani proceedings.
Stevan Bosses (cq), it lawyer representing Hasty from the New York firm Fitzpatrick.
His literary reputation now rests primarily on The Hasty Pudding, a pleasant and humorous mock epic inspired by homesickness for New England and containing vivid descriptions of rural scenes.
Hasty has four trimming machines to keep his trees in shape.
Earlier, when winding up debate on the 11th Malaysia Plan mid-term review for his ministry in the Dewan Rakyat, Liew said the government would not be hasty on abolishing the death sentence.
Melvin "Tom" Hasty, 76, of Du Quoin, passed away at 4:34 p.m.
Senator Panfilo Lacson defended the Philippine National Police (PNP) on Tuesday over the arrest of three lawyers following an anti-drug operation at a bar in Makati City last week, saying the public should not be 'too hasty or harsh in condemning' the policemen.
Idaho College of Osteopathic Medicine Founding Dean and Chief Academic Officer CEO Robert Hasty has equally lofty aspirations.
4 (ANI): The 48-year-old Clueless and Ant-Man star Paul Rudd has been awarded 2018 Man of the Year by Harvard University's Hasty Pudding Theatricals group.
(AP) -- Paul Rudd, the versatile and forever young actor and screenwriter who stars in "Ant-Man" was named 2018 Man of the Year by Harvard University's Hasty Pudding Theatricals on Thursday.
The world's media, top newspapers and magazines are in the right when they say US president Donald Trump is a ruthless, incendiary decision-maker and hasty policy drafter.
Global Banking News-July 28, 2016--Turkey criticises hasty S&P rating