step on a rake
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]The second sense was popularised by a gag in the 1993 episode "Cape Feare" of The Simpsons, in which Sideshow Bob, already injured, accidentally steps on several rakes, causing the handles to hit him in the face.
Pronunciation
[edit]Audio (General Australian): (file)
Verb
[edit]step on a rake (third-person singular simple present steps on a rake, present participle stepping on a rake, simple past and past participle stepped on a rake)
- (literally) To step on the tines of a garden rake, causing the handle of the rake to rise from the ground rapidly, striking the person walking in the face.
- (idiomatic) To fall victim to an avoidable (usually self-caused) hazard or error.
- 2012 August 16, Kevin Roose, “The Libor Scandal Is About to Hit Home”, in Intelligencer:
- But having seen Wall Street step on a rake time and time again when it comes to incriminating e-mails and villainous characters, you can be fairly confident that Liborgate is going to be just as big a hit in the U.S. as it was abroad.
- 2020 July 6, Scott Stinson, “Scott Stinson: The MLB could have come out on top of COVID-19. Instead, it's descending into chaos”, in National Post:
- Major League Baseball has displayed a unique ability to step on a rake in recent years, with a championship team marred by a cheating scandal and a sudden change in the performance of its baseballs that the league has been unable to explain.
- 2023 March 9, Evan Michealson, What to make of a weird Timberwolves team, 20223, page 9:
- Looking at the team's schedule to this point reveals signs of progress followed immediately by stepping on a rake.
Related terms
[edit]Translations
[edit]idiom: to fall victim to a hazard
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