tie a can to it

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English[edit]

Verb[edit]

tie a can to it (third-person singular simple present ties a can to it, present participle tying a can to it, simple past and past participle tied a can to it)

  1. (US, slang, dated, imperative) To forget it; to put an end to it.
    • 1909, A.G. Hendricks, Judicious Advertising and Advertising Experience, page 33:
      For ten years this phrase has proved the life of the agency business, and to tie a can to it today might terminate more seriously than could be imagined.
    • 1917, B. M. Bower, Starr, of the Desert, page 26:
      You better tie a can to it, sis; it don't get over with me.
    • 2011, Dolores Gordon-Smith, A Hundred Thousand Dragons:
      Damn the past. Let's tie a can to it.
    • 2012, Jack Vance, Golden Girl and Other Stories:
      Jean said disgustedly, “Tie a can to it, Webbard. Talk sense.”