mow, blow, and go
mow, blow, and go
Of or relating to a quick, cheap, rudimentary lawn care service in which one cuts the grass, blows the clippings away with a leaf-blower, and then departs. Typically put in quotation marks or hyphenated and used as a modifier before a noun. We are not some mow, blow, and go company—we pride ourselves on detail-oriented, high-quality lawn services. I worked on a mow-blow-and-go crew for the summer. The money wasn't great, but it was all in cash so I didn't have to pay any taxes on it. By the time I took over the company, it had been tarnished with a "mow, blow, and go" reputation thanks to the crummy practices of the previous owner.
See also: and, go
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.
mow, blow, and go
n. the lawn service that quickly mows the grass, blows the pavements clean, and leaves. Now you see them and now you don’t. It’s mow, blow, and go time.
See also: and, go
McGraw-Hill's Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions
- blower
- blow one's mind, to
- rap at
- rap at (someone or something)
- rap on (something)
- rush through
- have an inkling (of something)
- maiden voyage