eat the leek
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Act V, scene I between Fluellen and Pistol in Shakespeare's play Henry V.
Verb
[edit]eat the leek (third-person singular simple present eats the leek, present participle eating the leek, simple past ate the leek, past participle eaten the leek)
- To be compelled to take back one's words or put up with insulting treatment.
- 1919, Stanley J. Weyman, “XXXV My Lord Speaks Out”, in The Great House:
- He had eaten his leek and he was anxious to be done with it.