beat someone's time
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English
[edit]Verb
[edit]beat someone's time (third-person singular simple present beats someone's time, present participle beating someone's time, simple past beat someone's time, past participle beaten someone's time or (colloquial) beat someone's time)
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see beat, time.
- (informal, usually with with) To make advances toward someone's romantic partner.
- He was trying to beat my time with my girl.
- 1899, Felix E. Alley, "Ballad of Kidder Cole", in Roaming the Mountains with John A. Parris, John Parris, 1955
- I was to dance with Kidder the livelong night / But got my time beat by Charley Wright. / If I ever have to have a fight / I hope it will be with Charley Wright; / For he was the ruin of my soul / When he beat my time with Kidder Cole / (missing stanzas including one about Kidder going to South Carolina) / But she came back the following spring / And oh, how I made my banjo ring; / It helped me get my spirit right, / To beat the time of Charley Wright.
- 1949, Hearst's International Combined with Cosmopolitan[1], volume 126:
- There's a hat-check girl at that cafe — a droopy, fat little blonde — who's trying to beat my time with him. And he's falling for it, the poor baby!
- 2016, Carolyn Brown, Nicole Helm, Hell, Yeah / Outlaw Cowboy[2]:
- He said if Travis don't hurry up he's goin' to beat his time with you. We all got bets laid as to which one will get you to go on a real date first.