To "break free" is to free yourself forcibly from a confined or restricted state or condition.
Thus a prisoner, or a person in an unhappy marriage, might "break free", for instance.
Or by extension, if you were in a race, you might "break free" from all the other competitors, and go into the lead.
Thus a prisoner, or a person in an unhappy marriage, might "break free", for instance.
Or by extension, if you were in a race, you might "break free" from all the other competitors, and go into the lead.
by ZarakiAtsu December 20, 2016
Get the break free mug.A phrase used to subtly say you are taking someone's virginity in reference to defiling a pure nun by destroying her religious habit.
by Cod Knight June 9, 2018
Get the Breaking a Habit mug.An idiom I invented based on the phrasal verb "bottle up" which means to hide emotions or feelings inside.
Breaking the bottle basically means you're letting those emotions or feelings loose, accidentally or not.
Also the idiom equivalent of "venting" to someone.
Breaking the bottle basically means you're letting those emotions or feelings loose, accidentally or not.
Also the idiom equivalent of "venting" to someone.
by Zeph Here September 6, 2023
Get the breaking the bottle mug.Eliza: Take a break! and get away run away with us for the summer let's go upstate!
Alex: Um no
Also Alex: THE REYNOLDS PAMPHLET
Alex: Um no
Also Alex: THE REYNOLDS PAMPHLET
by KawaiiWolfAnime July 18, 2019
Get the Take a break! mug.Imperative. To wish someone a successful singing engagement. The choral equivalent of the theatrical imperative 'Break a leg!' (q.v.)
by toddsschneider October 7, 2016
Get the Break a lung! mug.Sucking dick for a job
by BirdieHandleBb February 13, 2017
Get the Bobby break mug.The idiom "break a leg" is commonly used to wish someone good luck, especially in the performing arts, such as before a stage performance or a theatrical production. The phrase is believed to have originated in the theater world, where it was considered bad luck to wish someone "good luck" before a performance. Instead, actors and performers would say "break a leg" as a way of wishing each other success. The phrase is now used more generally to wish someone good luck or success in any endeavor, not just in the performing arts.
The exact origin of the idiom is unclear, but there are several theories about its origin. One theory suggests that it may have originated in the theater world, where it was considered bad luck to wish someone "good luck" before a performance. Instead, performers would say "break a leg" as a way of expressing the opposite sentiment, hoping that the performer would have to take multiple bows at the end of the show, "breaking" the line of their leg as they did so.
The exact origin of the idiom is unclear, but there are several theories about its origin. One theory suggests that it may have originated in the theater world, where it was considered bad luck to wish someone "good luck" before a performance. Instead, performers would say "break a leg" as a way of expressing the opposite sentiment, hoping that the performer would have to take multiple bows at the end of the show, "breaking" the line of their leg as they did so.
by idiomsallday February 19, 2023
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