get lost

get lost

1. Literally, to become lost. We got lost on the way, so we're going to be late to the party.
2. To leave; to go away. Often used as an imperative addressed to someone with whom one is frustrated. Listen, I don't want to buy anything, so get lost! Get lost, will you, Derrick? I'm tired of listening to your nonsense. He'd better get lost before I come down there and give him a piece of my mind.
See also: get, lost
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

get lost

 
1. to become lost; to lose one's way. We got lost on the way home. Follow the path, or you might get lost.
2. Inf. Go away!; Stop being an annoyance! (Always a command.) Stop bothering me. Get lost! Get lost! I don't need your help.
See also: get, lost
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.

get lost

Go away, as in Get lost, we don't want you around. This rather rude slangy imperative dates from the 1940s.
See also: get, lost
The American Heritage® Dictionary of Idioms by Christine Ammer.

get lost

or

get stuffed

INFORMAL, RUDE
If you tell someone to get lost or get stuffed, you are telling them rudely to go away or that you do not care about their opinion. He whispered to the woman, kissing her hand until she stood up and told him to get lost. In the unlikely event that he should call you, then I suggest you tell him to get stuffed! Note: You can also tell someone to get knotted. If someone was to give him some friendly advice about where he's going wrong, he would tell them to get knotted.
See also: get, lost
Collins COBUILD Idioms Dictionary, 3rd ed.

get lost

go away (used, often in the imperative, as an expression of anger or impatience). informal
See also: get, lost
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary

get ˈlost!

(informal) an impolite way of telling somebody to go away, or of refusing something: I told him to get lost, but it makes no difference, he just keeps following me around.
See also: get
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary

Get lost!

exclam. Go away!; Beat it! Get lost, you’re bothering me!
See also: get
McGraw-Hill's Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions

get lost

Go away, leave me alone. This rude, slangy imperative dates from the first half of the 1900s. It seems to be replacing the somewhat earlier scram, with the same meaning, heard less often today. P. G. Wodehouse had it in Company for Henry (1967), “Can I have a word with you? In private . . . Get lost, young Jane.”
See also: get, lost
The Dictionary of Clichés by Christine Ammer
See also:
  • Get lost!
  • lose to
  • lose to (someone or something)
  • lose your way
  • lose (one's)/the way
  • give up as lost
  • lost on
  • lost on (one)
  • lost on one
  • shuffle
References in periodicals archive
All I care about as a cinema lover is whether I can get lost in that world."
By cataloging her masks, passionately accumulated while traveling, Diario de mascaras enables us to trace the random outlines of what writing, traveling, and living have in common for Luisa Valenzuela: the intense need to avoid the plan, to get lost. Valenzuela's new travelogue brings with it the undeniable fascination of distant peoples and places-from the equatorial jungle to the Dogon in Mali, Amazonia, Papua New Guinea, China, India, Japan, Nepal, Tibet, Egypt, and the Argentinean Chaco Salteno--as "narrated" by her masks.
In 2006 50-year-old tourist Martin Lake from Warwickshire managed to get lost for three days while within what local police called "shouting distance of help" after wandering off track near Alice Springs without water or a hat and with a flat mobile phone battery.
"Never Get Lost Again!: The Complete Guide to Improving Your Sense of Direction" is a guide to improving what some choose to believe is simply innate: one's sense of direction.
SO many drivers get lost in Birmingham that they are becoming a threat to the environment, it was claimed today.
Around two thirds of motorists get lost up to 10 times a year in the city, clocking up millions of wasted miles.
PEOPLE in Britain get lost for 1.5million hours every day.
The 18 to 29-year-old generation may be the most switched on to technology but this does not apply to their directional skills as they get lost for longer than other age groups.
This suggests that people with focal right hemisphere lesions who get lost will be able to compensate by the use of "verbal maps" to assist them in finding their way around.
"In most large races most birds get home, but in a big race it's not unusual for a large fraction of the birds to get lost," Moore says.