Rubicon

Related to Rubicon: Crossing the Rubicon

cross the Rubicon

To commit to a particular plan or course of action that cannot be reversed. The phrase refers to how Julius Caesar crossed the Rubicon river and became embroiled in civil war in 49 BCE. Look, if you cheat on this test, you are crossing the Rubicon, man. You can't take that back. I think I crossed the Rubicon when I took this management position. It would be a huge pay cut to go back to my old job, and my boss would be furious.
See also: cross, Rubicon

pass the Rubicon

To commit to a particular plan or course of action. The phrase refers to how Julius Caesar crossed the Rubicon river and became embroiled in civil war in 49 BCE. Look, if you cheat on this test, you are passing the Rubicon, man. You can't take that back. I think I passed the Rubicon when I took this management position. It would be a huge pay cut to go back to my old job, and my boss would be furious.
See also: pass, Rubicon
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

cross the Rubicon

Fig. to do something that inevitably commits one to following a certain course of action. (Alludes to the crossing of the River Rubicon by Julius Caesar with his army, which involved him in a civil war in B.C. 49.) Jane crossed the Rubicon by signing the contract. Find another job before you cross the Rubicon and resign from this one.
See also: cross, Rubicon
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.

cross the Rubicon

Irrevocably commit to a course of action, make a fateful and final decision. For example, Once he submitted his resignation, he had crossed the Rubicon. This phrase alludes to Julius Caesar's crossing the Rubicon River (between Italy and Gaul) in 49 b.c., thereby starting a war against Pompey and the Roman Senate. Recounted in Plutarch's Lives: Julius Caesar (c. a.d. 110), the crossing gave rise to the figurative English usage by the early 1600s.
See also: cross, Rubicon
The American Heritage® Dictionary of Idioms by Christine Ammer.

cross the Rubicon

FORMAL
If you cross the Rubicon, you make an important decision which cannot be changed and which will have very important consequences. Today the Government has crossed the Rubicon in favour of the Euro. In England and Wales the Rubicon has been crossed regarding the charging of fees to students. Note: This expression is variable, for example people sometimes talk about the crossing of the Rubicon or a crossing of the Rubicon. Such a decision would be a crossing of the Rubicon. Note: Sometimes this important decision is referred to as a person's Rubicon. There would be no turning back; if he was making a big mistake, this was his Rubicon. Note: The Rubicon was a small river which separated Roman Italy from Gaul, the province ruled by Julius Caesar. Caesar crossed the Rubicon in 49 BC, invaded Roman Italy, and started a civil war. `The die is cast' is based on the same incident.
See also: cross, Rubicon
Collins COBUILD Idioms Dictionary, 3rd ed.

cross the Rubicon

take an irrevocable step.
The Rubicon was a small river in north-east Italy which in the first century bc marked the boundary of Italy proper with the province of Cisalpine Gaul. By taking his army across the Rubicon into Italy in 49 bc , Julius Caesar broke the law forbidding a general to lead an army out of his own province, and so committed himself to war against the Senate and Pompey.
See also: cross, Rubicon
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary

cross the ˈRubicon

(formal) reach a point where an important decision is taken which cannot be changed later: Today we cross the Rubicon. There is no going back.The Rubicon was a stream which formed the border between Italy and Gaul. When Julius Caesar broke the law by crossing it with his army, it led inevitably to war.
See also: cross, Rubicon
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary

cross the Rubicon, to

To take an irrevocable step. The term dates from 49 b.c., when Julius Caesar crossed this river between Italy and Cisalpine Gaul, thereby invading Italy and disobeying Pompey and the Roman Senate. The Senate, he had learned, intended to disband his army, whereupon Caesar joined his advance guard on the Rubicon’s banks and told them, “We may still draw back, but once across that little bridge we will have to fight it out.” The term has been a cliché since about 1700.
See also: cross
The Dictionary of Clichés by Christine Ammer
See also:
  • cross the Rubicon
  • cross the Rubicon, to
  • pass the Rubicon
  • the die has been cast
  • the die is cast
  • die is cast
  • die is cast, the
  • beware the ides of March
  • et tu, Brute?
  • Tu
References in periodicals archive
But what makes the Rubicon so extraordinary is the double axle lock it can provide and the ease with which you can turn off the sway bar or anti-roll bar.
In Geneva, the special 1941 configuration is presented on the Rubicon model.
Rubicon Partners is a hands-on investment partnership focused on acquiring complex industrial businesses across Europe and North America.
Together with Rubicon, the company launched cloud and mobile technology with the Personify360 product suite, completed the strategic acquisitions of Wild Apricot and Small World Labs, meaningfully expanded investment in sales and marketing, and opened a new headquarters in Austin, Texas.
The Wrangler Unlimited Rubicon is powered by a 3.6-liter V6 gasoline engine that provides 284 horsepower and produces 35.4 kilograms per meter of torque.
The Team Rubicon special edition watch is available in four versions.
TouchTunes Media will be the first media vendor to take advantage of DOmedia's integration with Rubicon Project.
Based on the existing Wrangler Rubicon model, the new Recon adds adventure styling to the 4x4 capability thanks to equipment like 18-inch Granite Crystal aluminium wheels, a black dual top and a dual-vented Power Dome hood with a black-silhouette "Rubicon" decal.
<B Diana, Princess of Wales visited Rubicon Dance in 1984 Princes
Mr Lyon revealed his plans to Flintshire County Council chairman Councillor Ray Hughes and Cllr Derek Butler, Cabinet Member for Economic Development, during a visit to Rubicon's factory.
Los Angeles-based Farmers Insurance and Team Rubicon, a nonprofit that unites veterans with first responders to provide emergency response services, recently announced a collaboration that will integrate the skills of America's veterans into the Farmer's disaster response efforts.
Wabauskang First Nation has asked the Ontario Court of Appeal to hear its challenge of the recent decision dismissing Wabauskang's lawsuit against the Ontario government over its approval of Rubicon Minerals' proposed Phoenix Gold Mine near Red Lake.
8 May 2014 - US Rubicon Genomics Inc, a developer of nucleic acid library preparation products, said yesterday it had signed distribution agreements for its ThruPLEX-FD Prep Kits and PicoPLEX DNA-seq Kits with three life sciences companies in China.
Warburg Realty, one of Manhattan's leading residential real estate companies, announced the acquisition of Rubicon Property including its storefront at 451 Columbus Avenue.