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clean someone's clock

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English

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Etymology

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Originally military slang; perhaps from clock face.

Pronunciation

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Verb

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clean someone's clock (third-person singular simple present cleans someone's clock, present participle cleaning someone's clock, simple past and past participle cleaned someone's clock)

  1. (idiomatic, informal) To defeat someone decisively, in a physical fight or other competition or negotiation.
    Synonym: fix someone's clock
    • 1997 November 12, Richard W. Stevenson, “Executives Say Trade Bill Defeat Will Hurt Economy”, in New York Times, retrieved 7 Oct. 2008:
      "When big business goes head to head with unions, the unions clean their clock," said one Republican aide in Congress.
    • 2007 April 28, Carla Marinucci, “Hillary on a roll”, in San Francisco Chronicle, retrieved 7 Oct. 2008:
      Barack Obama cleaned her clock in the debates.
    • 2008 September 27, Jake Donovan, “Vicente Escobedo Rallies, Stops Dominic Salcido In Six”, in BoxingScene.com, retrieved 7 Oct. 2008:
      The heavily-tattooed Perez never recovered, getting nailed with flush head shots before a clean-up left hook cleaned his clock.

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Translations

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Further reading

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