red-handed
See also: redhanded
English
Etymology
From red + handed, likening to a murderer with their hands red with the victim's blood. The phrase to be taken with red hand originally meant "to be caught in the act". The use of red hand in this sense goes back to 15th-century Scotland and Scottish law. Sir Walter Scott's Ivanhoe (1819) contains the first recorded use of taken red-handed for someone apprehended in the act of committing a crime. The expression subsequently became more common as caught red-handed.[1]
Pronunciation
Audio (AU): (file)
Adjective
red-handed (comparative more red-handed, superlative most red-handed)
- (idiomatic) Showing clear evidence of guilt; in the act of wrongdoing.
- 1991 October, Edward L. Ayers, “Legacy of violence”, in American Heritage, volume 42, number 6, page 102:
- Another Southerner argued that "commerce has no social illusions" and that it would be commerce that would rid the region of "this historic, red-handed, deformed, and swaggering villain."
- 2003 August, Pamela Paul, “Dear Reader, Get a Life.”, in Psychology Today, volume 36, number 4, page 56:
- Your husband is having sex with other women -- that's perfectly clear. Sometimes when cheaters are nabbed red-handed they react with anger, they "rage" in an attempt to make the person who caught' em feel like they did something wrong.
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- Deadly, bloody.
- 2013, The San Francisco Calamity by Earthquake and Fire, →ISBN:
- The demon of fire followed close upon the heels of the unseen fiend of the earth's hidden caverns, and ran red-handed through the metropolis of the West, kindling a thousand unhurt buildings, while the horror-stricken people stood aghast in terror, as helpless to combat this new enemy as they were to check the ravages of the earthquake itself.
- 2014, Christian Cameron, The Great King, →ISBN:
- I grew to manhood listening to Greeks and Persians plotting various plots in my master's house, and one night all the plots burst forth into ugly blossoms and bore the fruit of red-handed war, and the Greek cities of Ionia revolted against the Persian overlords.
- 2014, Robert E. Howard, The Phoenix on the Sword, →ISBN:
- He sees in Conan a red-handed, rough-footed barbarian who came out of the north to plunder a civilized land.
- (informal) With hands that are red.
Usage notes
- Almost always used with the verb catch.
Translations
in the act of wrongdoing
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See also
References
- ^ Robert Hendrickson (1997) “Encyclopedia of Word and Phrase Origins”, in Facts on File, New York, pages 135–136, 138