lose one's rag
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English
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Audio (General Australian): (file)
Verb
[edit]lose one's rag (third-person singular simple present loses one's rag, present participle losing one's rag, simple past and past participle lost one's rag)
- (slang) To become angry.
- 1928, Ethel May Dell, The Gate Marked "Private", G. P. Putnam's Sons, page 248,
- […] he could not have said wherefore. “She was dressed as a bride if you must know,” he said. “But I don’t know what you’ve got to lose your rag about. She’s nothing to you.”
- c1934, in Famous Plays of 1933–1934, page 449,
- Doll: Well, I’ll be trotting along. Sorry I lost my rag with […]
- 1937, Arthur Calder-Marshall, Pie in the Sky, C. Scribner’s sons, page 315,
- […] home now and was I going to come with him or wasn’t I? And I lost my rag and said, no, it was his duty to take me home, not mine to take him.
- 1944, in William Boyd (Ed.), Evacuation in Scotland: A Record of Events and Experiments, University of London Press, Ltd., page 187,
- There is frankness of discussion and remark. For instance, it is quite usual for a visiting member of the staff to ask, ‘How is your temper these days?’ The reply might be, ‘I haven’t lost my rag for a week,’ which is an achievement.
- 2006, Louise Rennison, Startled by His Furry Shorts, HarperCollins, →ISBN, page 127–128,
- The last time I went to God’s house, Call-Me-Arnold lost his rag with me. Which is a bit un-Christian. After all, there was no real damage done vis-à-vis the elderly pensioner’s scarf inferno incident.
- 2007, Patricia Ferguson, Peripheral Vision, Solidus, →ISBN, page 295,
- ‘Come on, everyone loses their rag occasionally. It can’t be that bad. […] ’
- 2016, Lucy Kellaway on BBC "Business Daily" (April 18)
- E-mail alone didn't make the office passive-aggressive, as we were going that way anyway. It all started a couple of decades ago when the four great forces of modern office life, political correctness, HR, PR, and litigiousness, ruled that it was no longer acceptable to lose your rag.
- 1928, Ethel May Dell, The Gate Marked "Private", G. P. Putnam's Sons, page 248,
Usage notes
[edit]- Used with with when the anger is directed at a person
- When I told him about the accident, he lost his rag with me.
- Used with about or over when the anger is caused by an event
- There's no need to lose your rag over missing the train!
Synonyms
[edit]Translations
[edit]colloquial: to become angry
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