dance on a rope
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English
[edit]Verb
[edit]dance on a rope (third-person singular simple present dances on a rope, present participle dancing on a rope, simple past and past participle danced on a rope)
- (dated) To be hanged.
- Synonyms: hang, swing; see also Thesaurus:die by hanging
- 2011, Karen Maitland, The Gallows Curse:
- He sat and watched him dancing on a rope, choking and fighting for every breath, until his tongue swelled up in his mouth and his face turned black and still he struggled.
- 2018, Anna Day, The Fandom:
- 'Here. they arrest some jumped-up little rebel called Rose.' His finger hits nine o'clock. His voice rising with urgency. 'I meet her in my office, she shows no remorse. I think how lovely she'll look dancing on a rope.' He moves his finger close to the first line — the twelve o;clock line. 'I watch the bitch hang, the crowd turns and rips the gallows to the ground, then . . . Bam.'
- 2022, Robert McCammon, The King of Shadows:
- “I ain't no murderer and I don't care to dance on a rope!” “Me neither!” Gravelling's voice was just as shaky. “I'm lookin' at a few years, but not the hangman!”
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see dance, rope.; to dance on a tightrope or slack rope as an entertainer.