smell blood
English
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Verb
editsmell blood (third-person singular simple present smells blood, present participle smelling blood, simple past and past participle smelled blood or smelt blood)
- (idiomatic) To sense that one has an advantage over an adversary or rival.
- 1995, Jane Feather, Valentine, →ISBN, page 392:
- Later he intended to continue his goading of Neil. He could smell blood now; if only he could get the man to fall apart in one of their clubs.
- 1998 September 7, Paul Quinn-Judge, “Russian Roulette”, in Time:
- Smelling blood in the economic meltdown, the lower house of parliament, or Duma, took the offensive, calling for Yeltsin to resign.
- 2005 June 15, David DuPree, “Detroit stalls Spurs 96-79 in Game 3 of Finals”, in USA Today, retrieved 14 July 2011:
- The Pistons, once they smelled blood, got more aggressive and the Spurs simply ran out of gas.
- 2008 June 1, Nelson D. Schwartz, “The Trouble in Housing Trickles Up”, in New York Times, retrieved 14 July 2011:
- When buyers do turn up nowadays, she says, “they smell blood in the water and routinely offer 15 to 20 percent below the asking price.”
See also
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edit- “smell blood”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.