˜yĐÄvlog

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dead as a doornail



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Idioms and Phrases

Also, dead as a dodo or herring . Totally or assuredly dead; also finished. For example, The cop announced that the body in the dumpster was dead as a doornail , or The radicalism she professed in her adolescence is now dead as a dodo , or The Equal Rights Amendment appears to be dead as a herring . The first, oldest, and most common of these similes, all of which can be applied literally to persons or, more often today, to issues, involves doornail , dating from about 1350. Its meaning is disputed but most likely it referred to the costly metal nails hammered into the outer doors of the wealthy (most people used the much cheaper wooden pegs), which were clinched on the inside of the door and therefore were “dead,” that is, could not be used again. Dead as a herring dates from the 16th century and no doubt alludes to the bad smell this dead fish gives off, making its death quite obvious. Dead as a dodo , referring to the extinct bird, dates from the early 1900s.
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

The atmosphere in the O2 was as dead as a doornail hammered into a Dodo and buried in a concrete bunker.

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As then-Supervisor Zev Yaroslavsky put it: “It’s dead as a doornail out there.”

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Justice Elena Kagan referred to the case as “dead as a doornail several times over” and “dead, dead, dead, in all the ways that something can be dead”; deciding it, she said, “just doesn’t seem like something that a court should be anxious to do.”

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Tax increases on small businesses: You better believe those were dead as a doornail.

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Longtime political consultant Garry South told me he thinks Caruso is “dead as a doornail,” and the story on Bass and her scholarship “certainly won’t cost her the election.”

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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023

Idioms from The American HeritageŸ Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.

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