释义 |
hellbent
hell-bent or hell·bent (hĕl′bĕnt′)adj. Impetuously or recklessly determined to do or achieve something: was hell-bent on winning.hellbent (ˌhɛlˈbɛnt) adjinformal (and foll by: on) strongly or rashly intenthell•bent (ˈhɛlˌbɛnt) adj. 1. stubbornly or recklessly determined. 2. going at terrific speed. adv. 3. in a hellbent manner. [1825–35] Translationshellbent
be hell-bent onTo be very determined to do something, perhaps annoyingly so. She's hell-bent on coming here for Thanksgiving, so we better clean the guest room. I'm hell-bent on getting an A on this exam, so I've been studying all week.See also: onhell-bent for leatherVery quickly or as quickly as possible. The "leather" in the phrase is thought to refer to a horse's saddle or whip. When her ex-boyfriend walked into the party, Patty went hell-bent for leather to get out of there.See also: leatherhell-bent for (something)Moving toward some place or thing very quickly and/or recklessly. I always find myself yelling at other drivers when I'm hell-bent for work.hell-bent for leatherInf. moving or behaving recklessly; riding a horse fast and recklessly. They took off after the horse thief, riding hell-bent for leather. Here comes the boss. She's not just angry; she's hell-bent for leather.See also: leatherhell-bent for leatherMoving recklessly fast, as in Out the door she went, hell-bent for leather. The use of hell-bent in the sense of "recklessly determined" dates from the first half of the 1800s. Leather alludes to a horse's saddle and to riding on horseback; this colloquial expression may be an American version of the earlier British army jargon hell for leather, first recorded in 1889. See also: leatherhell-bent for leatherMoving rapidly and with determination. “Hell” in this case strengthens the word “bent,” which means a direct route (although it sounds as though it should mean the opposite). “Leather” refers either to a saddle or to a whip used to urge a horse to move faster, or perhaps items. “Hell for leather” meaning “all deliberate haste” was a popular phrase in itself. Among a number of variants is “hell-bent for election,” said to have originated with the 1840 Maine gubernatorial race and appearing in an 1899 Stephen Crane story: “One puncher racin' his cow-pony hell-bent-for-election down Main Street.” Others are “hell-bent for breakfast,” “for Sunday,” and “for Georgia.”See also: leatherThesaurusSeehell-bent |