make or break
make or break
1. verb To cause either to succeed or to fail; to cause either a positive or negative outcome. When you're young, you often think that big obstacles will either make or break you, but as you get older you realize that it's not that simple. One kick can make or break their season.
2. adjective Describing such a scenario. In this usage, the phrase is usually hyphenated. This shot is make-or-break for the home team.
See also: break, make
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.
make or break someone
[of a task, job, career choice] to bring success to or improve, or ruin, someone. The army will either make or break him. It's a tough assignment, and it will either make or break her.
See also: break, make
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.
make or break
Cause either total success or total ruin, as in This assignment will make or break her as a reporter. This rhyming expression, first recorded in Charles Dickens's Barnaby Rudge (1840), has largely replaced the much older (16th-century) alliterative synonym make or mar, at least in America.
See also: break, make
The American Heritage® Dictionary of Idioms by Christine Ammer.
make or break
be the factor which decides whether something will succeed or fail.A variant of this phrase, found chiefly in British English, is make or mar . The use of make together with mar is recorded from the early 15th century, but since the mid 19th century break has become more common.
1998 Your Garden Neighbours can make or break a home and there's certainly no keeping up with the Jones's mentality here.
See also: break, make
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary
ˌmake or ˈbreak
(informal) the thing which decides whether something succeeds or fails: This movie is make or break for the production company. This is a make-or-break year for us.See also: break, make
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary
make or break, to
To bring on either success or ruin. This term began life as the alliterative make or mar, which dates from the fifteenth century (“Neptunus, that dothe bothe make and marre,” John Lydgate, Assembly of Gods). Dickens was among the first to substitute the current rhyming cliché (in Barnaby Rudge, 1840), which has largely replaced the older form.
See also: make
The Dictionary of Clichés by Christine Ammer
- make or break, to
- mar
- have no cause to (do something)
- have cause to (do something)
- have cause to do
- mess with (one's) head
- mess with someone's head
- cause trouble
- bring (something) crashing down (around) (one)
- bring crashing down