slap leather
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English
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Audio (General Australian): (file)
Verb
[edit]slap leather (third-person singular simple present slaps leather, present participle slapping leather, simple past and past participle slapped leather)
- (US, idiomatic) To make a quick motion to draw one's handgun from its holster, especially in a duel in the Old West.
- 2001 August 17, Stephen Hunter, “'American Outlaws': The Young And the West-less”, in Washington Post, retrieved 7 July 2015:
- [T]he western . . . provides a ready armature for other dramas that have nothing to do with slapping leather, riding horseflesh or kissing purty gals.
- 2010, “Movies: Destry (1954)”, in New York Times, retrieved 7 July 2015:
- Murphy plays Tom Destry, the peace-loving son of a notorious gunslinger. . . . Though he prefers to talk rather than slap leather, Destry manages to keep the bad guys at bay.
- 2015 April 20, Kelly Bostian, “Quick-draw cowboys face off to find Oklahoma's fastest guns”, in Tulsa World, retrieved 7 July 2015:
- With .45s strapped to their sides, gunslingers—30 men, six women, even an 11-year-old kid—slogged through the mud in their cowboy boots to reach a dirt-caked boardwalk where, one after another, they slapped leather to see who would reign as Oklahoma’s fastest gun.
Synonyms
[edit]Further reading
[edit]- “slap leather”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.