hold my beer
English
Etymology
Suggesting that the speaker is holding a beer, and needs someone else to hold it in order to engage in a foolish act.
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /həʊld maɪ bɪə/
- (General American) IPA(key): /hoʊld maɪ bɪɹ/
Phrase
- (humorous, imperative, UK) I am about to start a fight.
- (humorous, imperative, US) I am about to do something crazy or difficult that will nevertheless be easy for me.
- 2008, Kiven Hopper, One Hundred and One Dirty Nasty Disgusting Jokes You'll Love Reading, page 227:
- 98% OF AMERICANS SAY 'OH SHIT' BEFORE GOING IN THE DITCH ON A SLIPPERY ROAD. THE OTHER 2% ARE FROM MINNESOTA AND THEY SAY, ‘HOLD MY BEER AND WATCH THIS.’
- 2010, Virginia Alene, Catch And Release, page 18:
- When he says “Hold my beer and watch this” What he means is “I'm a crazy Redneck and love to show off.”
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- (humorous, imperative, US) I will respond to someone doing something questionable by doing something even more questionable.
- 2016, Tom Phillips; et al, “18 Tweets About How America Has Out-Brexited Brexit”, in Buzzfeed:
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Usage notes
Usually occurs as part of the longer phrase "Hold my beer and watch this".
Translations
I am about to start a fight
|
I am about to do something crazy
|
I will respond to someone doing something questionable
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