put foot down
Related to put foot down: put best foot forward, set foot
put (one's) foot down
To be unyielding or inflexible in one's position or decision. The kids complained and complained when we refused to get a puppy, but we had to put our foot down. As a manager, you have to put your foot down sometimes, or your staff will walk all over you.
See also: down, foot, put
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.
put one's foot down (about someone or something)
Fig. to assert something strongly. The boss put her foot down and refused to accept any more changes to the plan.
See also: down, foot, put
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.
put (one's) foot down
To take a firm stand.
See also: down, foot, put
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition.
put one's foot down, to
To take a firm position. The analogy presumably is to setting one or both feet in a fixed position, representing a firm stand. Although versions of this term (usually with set one’s foot down) exist from the sixteenth century on, it became current only in the nineteenth century. The OED cites James Payn’s The Luck of the Darrells (1886): “She put her foot down . . . upon the least symptoms of an unpleasantry.”
See also: foot, put
The Dictionary of Clichés by Christine Ammer
- put (one's) foot down
- put one's foot down
- put your foot down
- stand pat
- stand pat (on something)
- stand pat on something
- soften
- soften (one's or someone's) stance (on something)
- soften stance
- stance