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Definition 2024
high_and_dry
high and dry
English
Adjective
high and dry (not comparable)
- Left out of water, stranded on a beach, or in the stocks for repair, or in dry dock.
- Abandoned, stranded, helpless.
- (pejorative) Associated with the high church (the Church of England and other Anglican traditions, in reference to their "high" political position in England and "dry"/austere mode of worship), as opposed to the "low and slow" Evangelical party and the "broad and shallow" broad church.
- 1844, A. H. Maltby, The New Englander, volume 2, page 321:
- "There are two recognized parties in the church of England, the old High-and-dry church party, and the so-called Evangelical. To one or other of these two the Anglo-Catholic must conform."
- 1844, A. H. Maltby, The New Englander, volume 2, page 321:
- (US, slang, of a sandwich) With no condiments.
Derived terms
See also
References
- John Stephen Farmer, A Dictionary of Slang and Colloquial English: Abridged from the Seven-volume, page 222 (G. Routledge & Sons, limited, 1905)
- Albert Barrère, A Dictionary of Slang, Jargon & Cant Embracing English, American, and Anglo-Indian Slang, Pidgin English, Gypsies' Jargon and Other Irregular Phraseology, Volume 1, page 435 (1897)
- Martin Robson, Not Enough Room to Swing a Cat: Naval Slang and Its Everyday Usage, page 50 (Anova Books, 2012)
- Barbara Ann Kipfer, Phraseology, page 137 (Sourcebooks, 2008)