tide over
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See also: tideover
English
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Audio (General Australian): (file)
Verb
[edit]tide over (third-person singular simple present tides over, present participle tiding over, simple past and past participle tided over)
- (transitive, idiomatic) To support or sustain (someone), especially financially, for a limited period.
- Could you lend me ten pounds to tide me over till payday?
- Would a small snack tide you over until dinner?
- 1901, Henry James, The Papers:
- Each evening, it was true, when the flare of Fleet Street would have begun really to smoke, she had, in resistance to old habit, a little to hold herself; but for three successive days she tided over that crisis.
- (transitive, obsolete outside India) To endure; weather.
- 1895, Marie Corelli, The Sorrows of Satan, →OCLC, page 75:
- I had a certain grim pleasure in reading letters from two or three literary men, asking for work ‘as secretary or companion,’ or failing that, for the loan of a little cash to ‘tide over present difficulties.’
- 1952 December, R. C. Riley, “By Rail to Kemp Town”, in Railway Magazine, page 832:
- In responding, J. P. Knight, the Traffic Manager, emphasised the company's desire to meet the wants of Brighton in every way and to develop traffic, while the question of a reduction in fares would be considered as soon as they had tided over their most pressing difficulties.
- 2001, Swami Parmeshwaranand, Encyclopaedic Dictionary of Puranas:
- I will therefore suggest a way to tide over this difficulty.
Synonyms
[edit]Derived terms
[edit]- tideover (adj)
Translations
[edit]to help out