cash in one's chips
English
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Verb
editcash in one's chips (third-person singular simple present cashes in one's chips, present participle cashing in one's chips, simple past and past participle cashed in one's chips)
- (idiomatic) To discontinue an activity, accepting whatever gains or losses one has incurred; to give up.
- 1913, B. M. Bower, chapter 13, in The Gringos:
- "Looks like these grandees'll have to cash in their chips and quit, but it's a darned shame."
- 1988 October 25, Andrea Adelson, “Business People: Harrah's Officer Joins Resorts International”, in New York Times, retrieved 14 June 2011:
- Yesterday the polo-playing executive cashed in his chips at Harrah's to take a post with even higher stakes, agreeing to become president and chief executive of Resorts International Inc.
- 2005 June 21, Thomas McCarroll, “Corporate Raider on the Ropes”, in Time:
- "I am not going to stand by and watch this company bleed to death. If we can't make money, I will cash in my chips."
- (idiomatic) To die.
- 1950 January 10, H. L. MacPherson, “Another Outlaw Dies With Boots Off”, in Windsor Star, Canada, retrieved 14 June 2011:
- A tough old hombre, unregenerate to the last, cashed in his chips in Oklahoma City the other day.
- 1982 January 24, Evan Hunter, “Spies and Moles and Other Entertainers”, in New York Times, retrieved 14 June 2011:
- So what are trained readers of spy novels supposed to believe when Michael cashes in his chips and two strangers arrive to remove his body from the premises?
- 2007 Feb. 7, Cowboy Dan Lewis, "Two Birds, But No Stone," Julian News (California, USA), p. 6 (retrieved 14 June 2011):
- Two years and one month ago I broke my neck in a car accident. I made it through but just barely. I came real close to cashing in my chips.
Synonyms
edit- See Thesaurus:die
See also
editReferences
edit- “cash in one's chips”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.