182corner
fight your corner
If you fight your corner, you state your opinion openly and you defend it vigorously. Verbs such as `argue', `defend', and `stand' are sometimes used instead of `fight'. This expression is used in British English.
The future of Britain lies in the EU and we must fight our corner from within using honest and intelligent arguments.
At any rate, he quickly showed that his courage to stand his corner, his enthusiasm and his friendliness made up for any lack of stature.
I always defend my corner and I often disagree with what gets included.
in a corner
in a tight corner
out of a corner
If you are in a corner or in a tight corner, you are in a situation which is difficult to deal with or escape from.
The government is in a corner on interest rates and the same could happen on fiscal policy.
Herb was a big, muscular man on the edge of 50: a guy who could obviously fend for himself if placed in a tight corner.
When he had been in a tight corner before, Mr Gorbachev had been able to use his own powers of persuasion to produce a compromise.
If someone backs you into a corner, they put you in a situation which is difficult to deal with or escape from. You can replace `back' with other verbs such as `force' or `drive'.
As Atwater told the story, his own mother backed him into a corner and asked, `Lee, did you do that?' `No, Mama,' he replied.
He appears to have backed himself into a tight corner and his only escape appears to be promotion.
If something gets you out of a corner or out of a tight corner, it helps you to escape from or deal with a difficult situation.
The South African move has got English cricket officials out of a tight corner.
in your corner
If you say that someone is in your corner or that you have them in your corner, you mean that they are supporting you and helping you.
Harry and I were encouraged. We felt we had made a pretty good despite Irwin and his . From words spoken after our meeting, we felt we already had Bob Uhlein in our corner.
I remember Jackie saying years ago that Red was a gentleman and he always was in his corner, he could always depend on Red to give him the necessary backup he needed.
just around the corner
If you say that something is just around the corner, you mean that it is about to happen. You can vary this expression, for example by saying `just around the next corner', or, in American English, by saying `right around the corner'.
With summer just around the corner, there couldn't be a better time to treat your home to a bright new look.
He said the strike would adversely affect democracy when general elections were just round the corner.
Fearful that war was right around the corner, they promptly began to lay in extensive stores of food supplies.
The worry is about what may lie around the next corner.
paint someone into a corner
box someone into a corner
If someone paints you into a corner or boxes you into a corner, they force you into a difficult situation where you have to act in a certain way. If you paint yourself into a corner or box yourself into a corner, you put yourself in a difficult situation by your own actions.
The big banks have allowed themselves to be painted into a corner. They need deregulation in order to turn things around, but won't be able to get it unless they can reassure the public that deregulation won't result in another financial disaster.
You'll fight to the death when you're boxed into a corner unless you're provided a reasonable way out.
The Government has painted itself into a corner on the issue of equalising the State pension age.
turn the corner
If someone or something turns the corner, they begin to recover from a serious illness or a difficult situation.
Joe turned the corner, medically.
Has California's economy finally turned the corner? In April the official figure for the state's unemployment rate dropped for the second month running.
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