lock horns with, to

lock horns with, to

To engage in a fight, to clash. This transfer from the battles of stags, bulls, and other beasts that use their horns to fight is surprisingly recent, dating only from the nineteenth century. W. T. Porter used it in A Quarter Race in Kentucky (1846): “We locked horns without a word, thar all alone, and I do think we fit [fought] an hour.”
See also: horn, lock
The Dictionary of Clichés by Christine Ammer
See also:
  • fight
  • fight (one's way) through
  • fight through
  • fight for
  • fight for (someone or something)
  • could fight a circle-saw
  • could fight a circle-saw (and it a runnin')
  • it takes two to make a quarrel
  • quarrel
  • fight the good fight