take to the cleaners
Related to take to the cleaners: On a par, hold off, come to fruition
take (one) to the cleaners
1. To cheat or swindle one for a lot or all of their money. Despite its meaning, the phrase as used often does not refer to actual cheating. It was my first time playing poker at the casino, and the more experienced players definitely took me to the cleaners. The con man made a living taking people to the cleaners with his scams.
2. To soundly defeat or best one; to succeed over one by a wide margin. This young team is taking the veteran squad to the cleaners tonight.
See also: cleaner, take
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.
take someone to the cleaners
1. Sl. to take a lot of someone's money; to swindle someone. The lawyers took the insurance company to the cleaners, but I still didn't get enough to pay for my losses. The con artists took the old man to the cleaners.
2. Sl. to defeat or best someone. We took the other team to the cleaners. Look at the height they've got! They'll take us to the cleaners!
See also: cleaner, take
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.
take to the cleaners
1. Take or cheat one out of all of one's money or possessions, as in Her divorce lawyer took him to the cleaners, or That broker has taken a number of clients to the cleaners. [Slang; early 1900s]
2. Drub, beat up, as in He didn't just push you-he took you to the cleaners. [Slang; early 1900s]
See also: cleaner, take
The American Heritage® Dictionary of Idioms by Christine Ammer.
take to the cleaners
Slang To take all the money or possessions of, especially by outsmarting or swindling.
See also: cleaner, take
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition.
take to the cleaners, to
To dupe or defraud; to wipe out financially. This term may have been derived from the older to be cleaned out, which dates from the early nineteenth century and has precisely the same meaning. The current cliché is American slang dating from the mid-twentieth century, when commercial dry-cleaning establishments became commonplace, but it probably originated, like the older term, among gamblers. H. MacLennan used it in Precipice (1949): “He had taken Carl to the cleaners this time.”
See also: take
The Dictionary of Clichés by Christine Ammer
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- take somebody to the cleaners
- take someone to the cleaners
- take something
- taken
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- take it
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- take (one) for (something)
- take (one) to task