between the hammer and the anvil

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English

Etymology

Referring to the metal on a blacksmith's anvil, which is beaten with a hammer.

Pronunciation

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Prepositional phrase

between the hammer and the anvil

  1. (principally UK, idiomatic) With the choice between two unpleasant or distasteful options; in a predicament or quandary.
    • 1848, Jean Henri Merle d'Aubigné, The Protector, a vindication, page 250:
      Yet for a time the nation was again placed between the democracy of the levellers and the despotism of the Stuarts, — between the hammer and the anvil.
    • 1990, Judas Priest, Between The Hammer and the Anvil:
      The sinner / Will testify / They'll suffer / When sacrificed on high / The burning sermons purge their evil words / Between the hammer and the anvil

Synonyms

Translations