take off one's gloves
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English
[edit]Verb
[edit]take off one's gloves (third-person singular simple present takes off one's gloves, present participle taking off one's gloves, simple past took off one's gloves, past participle taken off one's gloves)
- To be unrestrained, especially in acting in a violent or punitive manner.
- 1952, United States. Congress, Congressional Record, page 8391:
- The public's duty is to take the role of prosecutor in seeking out the truth: and we ought to roll up our sleeves, take off the gloves, and wade into action.
- 2011, Simon Sebag Montefiore, Jerusalem: The Biography – A History of the Middle East, page 541:
- Ben-Gurion's self-restraint was soon exhausted and the British now took off their gloves to crush the Arabs by all and any means: they collectively punished villages and at one point destroyed a whole neighbourhood of Jaffa.
- 2015, Hunt Tooley, The Great War: Western Front and Home Front, page 208:
- So, for example, in the midst of social tensions and manpower shortages in Britain (December 1916), David Lloyd George came to head a war regime which took off its gloves in handling the domestic unrest and keeping dissidents, like Siegfried Sassoon and his famous antiwar letter, out of the public eye.
- 2017, András Jakab, Dimitry Kochenov, The Enforcement of EU Law and Values:
- The Court is willing to take off its gloves for the most serious infringements, however.
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see take off, glove.