go to pot
English
Etymology
Figuratively be cut up and tossed into a pot like meat.
Verb
go to pot (third-person singular simple present goes to pot, present participle going to pot, simple past went to pot, past participle gone to pot)
- (figuratively) To come to ruin, especially to decline or deteriorate.
- They haven't been maintaining it, and the downtown area has really gone to pot over the past 20 years.
- 1593, anonymous author, The Life and Death of Iacke Straw […], Act I:
- Iacke Straw. […] I haue his wife and children pledges, for his ſpeedie returne from the King, to whom he is gone with our meſſage.
Tom Miller. Let him take heede hee bring a wiſe anſwere to our worships, or els his pledges goes to the pot.
- (archaic) Go to hell. (an angry dismissal)
- 1837 September 20, William Cullen Bryant, Calhoun’s Diminished Stature:
- At this moment the rabbit sprang from his arms and disappeared among the brush wood. "Go to pot," said the man, "you are a good-for-nothing dry-meated beast, to make the best of you."
Synonyms
- (decline or deteriorate): go to shit (vulgar); go to the dogs, go downhill; see also Thesaurus:worsen
Translations
grow worse
|
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.