get one's ducks in a row

English

Verb

get one's ducks in a row (third-person singular simple present gets one's ducks in a row, present participle getting one's ducks in a row, simple past got one's ducks in a row, past participle (UK) got one's ducks in a row or (US) gotten one's ducks in a row)

  1. Alternative form of have one's ducks in a row
    • 1979, John le Carré, Smiley's People, page 265:
      It was only ten-thirty but he wanted the time, he wanted to circle before he settled; time, as Enderby would say, to get his ducks in a row.
    • 1991, Winn Schwartau, Terminal Compromise:
      And he says, ‘we'll call you back soon, real soon, so get your ducks in a row’ and that scares the shit out of the corporate muckity-mucks.
    • 1996, Chuck Palahniuk, Fight Club, published 2005, page 138:
      I'm to prepare for a formal review in two weeks. Reserve a conference room. Get all my ducks in a row. Update my résumé. That sort of thing.
    • 1997 October, Garrison Keillor, “Talk Radio”, in The Atlantic Monthly, volume 280, number 4, page 59:
      He told her to say he wasn't in the office if the dean should call and ask for him. "I'd like to get all my ducks in a row before I talk to him. Okay?"
    • 2007 October 24, David Brindle, “Johnson rules out an end to means testing”, in The Guardian, →ISSN:
      Owing to an apparent failure of Whitehall departments to get their ducks in a row, the planned unveiling of protocols on joint working was withdrawn from the speech at the last minute, leaving the minister nothing to announce.
    • 2013 July 15, Simon Hoggart, “Prince Charles's secretary tries to get Duchy tax ducks in a row”, in The Guardian, →ISSN:
      Prince Charles's secretary tries to get Duchy tax ducks in a row [title]
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