词组 | biked |
释义 | (redirected from biked)get on (one's) bikeTo go out in pursuit of a job. Primarily heard in UK. You really need to get on your bike before all of your money runs out. on your bikeGo away and stop being annoying. (Often stylized as "on yer bike!") God, what a dreadful pun—on your bike! All right kids, on yer bikes, you're starting to get on my nerves! get off (one's) bikeTo become angry or irritated. Primarily heard in Australia, Ireland. Don't get off your bike—I wasn't trying to insult you. On your bike!and Go to your room!Sl. imperative. Get out of here!; Get on your bike and get out! What a bad joke! No puns allowed here! On your bike! That was a ridiculous remark. Go to your room! get off your bikeAUSTRALIAN, INFORMALIf someone gets off their bike, they become so angry or upset that they cannot control themselves. It was just an accident — there's no need to get off your bike! get on your bikeBRITISH, INFORMAL1. People sometimes say get on your bike to tell someone that they no longer have a job. By the end of the week Neilsen had been told to get on his bike by new boss Jim Dale. Note: This expression is sometimes written `get on yer bike', to represent an informal pronunciation of `your'. `Get us promoted or get on yer bike!' That's Derby's ultimatum to their manager Andy Cox after their disappointing season. 2. If you get on your bike, you make an effort to find work, travelling to different places. He will for ever be remembered for telling the unemployed to "get on your bike" even though he never said it. on your bikeBRITISH, INFORMALPeople sometimes say on your bike to tell someone angrily to go away. Go on, on your bike, mate! Note: This expression is sometimes spelled `on yer bike', to represent an informal pronunciation of `your'. I've had enough! On yer bike! get off your bikebecome annoyed.Australian & New Zealand informal 1939 Xavier Herbert Capricornia ‘I tell you I saw no-one.’ ‘Don't get off your bike, son.—I know you're tellin' lies.’ on your bike!1 go away! 2 take action! British informalSense 2 became a catchphrase in 1980s Britain, when it was used as an exhortation to the unemployed to show initiative in their attempt to find work. It was taken from a speech by the Conservative politician Norman Tebbit in which he said of his unemployed father: ‘He did not riot, he got on his bike and looked for work.’ on your bike!(British English, informal) a rude or humorous way of telling somebody to go away: ‘Can I borrow some money, Dave?’ ‘On your bike!’bike n. a motorcycle; a bicycle. You have to wear a helmet with a bike that size, don’t you? bike boys n. cops; the police. Look out! Here come the bike boys. On your bike!and Go to your room! imperative Get out of here!; Go away and stop bothing me. (Neither is to be taken literally.) What a bad joke! No puns allowed here! On your bike! Nasty mouth! Such talk! Go to your room! |
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