work over
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
- Verb (transitive):
- To physically assault or beat someone severely, typically as an act of aggression, intimidation, or punishment.
- To subject someone to a thorough and often violent beating.
Usage
- The verb "work over" is used to describe a deliberate, aggressive physical attack on a person. It implies a sustained and systematic beating.
- It is often used in informal contexts, particularly those involving crime, violence, or threats.
- The object of the verb is the person who is being beaten.
Examples
- Verb:
- The gang threatened to work him over if he didn't pay the protection money.
- After the argument, he was worked over by three men in the alley.
- The mob boss ordered his enforcers to work over the informant.
Advanced Usage
- "to give someone a (good/proper) working over": This is a common noun phrase derived from the verb, emphasizing the thoroughness of the beating.
- The rival gang gave him a proper working over; he was in the hospital for a week.
Variants and Related Words
- Working-over (noun): The act or instance of beating someone severely.
- He was hospitalized after the brutal working-over.
Synonyms
- Beat up: To strike repeatedly so as to inflict serious injury.
- Assault: To make a physical attack on.
- Thrash: To beat soundly in punishment.
- Rough up: To treat violently; to beat or manhandle.
Related Phrasal Verbs
(Note: "Work over" itself is a phrasal verb. Other phrasal verbs with "work" have different meanings and are not synonyms for violent assault.)
Related Idioms
- "To beat to a pulp": To beat someone so severely they are badly bruised and injured. This is a close synonym in meaning and intensity to "work over."
- The boxer beat his opponent to a pulp.
Verb
- give a beating to; subject to a beating, either as a punishment or as an act of aggression
- Thugs beat him up when he walked down the street late at night
- The teacher used to beat the students