on the hook
Appearance
English
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Audio (General Australian): (file)
Prepositional phrase
[edit]- (often followed by for) In debt; obligated to pay or provide; liable; responsible or blamed.
- Antonym: off the hook
- 1991 October 27, Barbara Presley Noble, “Making a Difference: Lloyd's 'Indentured Servant'”, in New York Times, retrieved 15 June 2011:
- For now, at least, Mr. Wedell, who is a vice president at the Robinson-Humphrey Company, a subsidiary of Shearson Lehman, is still on the hook for unsettled claims.
- 2008 September 29, “Washington to Wall Street: Drop Dead”, in Newsweek, retrieved 15 June 2011:
- Yes, incumbents of both parties—especially those incumbents facing tough re-election campaigns—don't want to be on the hook for this vote.
- 2010 April 15, Joseph R. Szczesny, “GM's Pension: A Ticking Time Bomb for Taxpayers?”, in Time:
- Could taxpayers really be on the hook for UAW pensions? Yes.
- (of animals) Slaughtered for food.
- Antonym: on the hoof
Translations
[edit]liable — see liable
References
[edit]- “on the hook”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.