light into
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Phrasal verb from light (“to get down, drop, come”, verb) + into (“against”, preposition).
Verb
[edit]light into (third-person singular simple present lights into, present participle lighting into, simple past lit into or lighted into, past participle lit into)
- (transitive, idiomatic) To set upon or attack.
- 1885, Mark Twain, chapter 22, in Huckleberry Finn:
- [H]e lit into that horse with his whip.
- 1915, Lucy Maud Montgomery, chapter 11, in Anne of the Island:
- [S]he lit into everybody else in the church and gave them a fearful raking down, calling them right out by name and telling them how they all had behaved, and casting up all the quarrels and scandals of the past ten years.
- 1935 April 25, “U.S. Judge and Wife Killed by Bandits”, in Montreal Gazette, retrieved 16 Jan. 2010:
- "Father grabbed the two guns and told me to light into the other man. I jumped on him and started choking him."
- 2003 January 13, Diane Roberts, “Graham would make Florida proud”, in St. Petersburg Times, retrieved 16 Jan. 2010:
- He speaks with more passion than ever, lighting into George W. Bush for fumbling the economy.