take a bath
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English
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Verb
[edit]take a bath (third-person singular simple present takes a bath, present participle taking a bath, simple past took a bath, past participle taken a bath)
- To bathe.
- She told the children to take a bath and wash off the mud and grime.
- 2009, Peter Sander, Jennifer Sander, 573 Ways to Save Money: Save the Cost of This Book Many Times Over in Less than a Day!, page 211:
- Take a bath with fragrant herbs.
- (idiomatic) To lose a large amount of money in an investment.
- Shareholders took a bath when the company went bankrupt.
- 1983 December, ‘Look before you leap into a commodity pool’, in Kiplinger's Personal Finance, page 74,
- In the high-risk world of futures contracts, pooling the risks could be just another way to take a bath.
- 2009, John Burley, Money Secrets of the Rich: Learn the 7 Secrets to Financial Freedom[1], page 163:
- The lenders took a bath because they had to honor fixed rate loans of 5 to 10% while borrowing money at 15 to 20% to fund them.
- 2009, William J. O'Neil, How to Make Money in Stocks: A Winning System in Good Times or Bad[2], page 235:
- The fastest way to take a bath in the stock market is to try to prove that you are right and the market is wrong.
Synonyms
[edit]Translations
[edit]to bathe — see bathe