kick the bucket
/ˈkɪk ðə ˈbʌkɪt/
UK: /ˈkɪk ðə ˈbʌkɪt/
kick the bucket
English
Verb
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Definition
To die.
Etymology
There are many theories as to where this idiom comes from, but the Oxford English Dictionary (OED) suggests the following: * A person standing on a pail or bucket with their head in a slip noose would kick the bucket so as to commit suicide. The OED, however, says that this is mainly speculative; * An archaic use of bucket was a beam from which a pig is hung by its feet prior to being slaughtered, and to kick the bucket originally signified the pig's death throes. The OED finds this a more plausible theory. Another theory is given by Roman Catholic Bishop Abbot Horne.
Example Sentences
- "The old horse finally kicked the bucket."
- "My posthumous book Allegorizings, which will go to press in London and New York the minute I kick the bucket, is loosely governed by my growing conviction that almost nothing in life is only what it seems. It contains nothing revelatory at all."
- "I think my sewing machine has kicked the bucket."
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