let one's short back and sides down
English
Verb
let one's short back and sides down
- To let one's hair down, especially on the part of a man who is very straight-laced.
- 2008, Tom Gleeson, Playing Poker with the SAS: A Comedy Tour of Iraq and Afghanistan, →ISBN:
- It's on the way home that they let their hair down.' Well, only as much as you can let short-back-and-sides down.
- 2012, Jeff Dawson, Back Home: England And The 1970 World Cup, →ISBN:
- Even a military man, though, can let his short back and sides down when national pride is to be celebrated.
- 2013 September 11, Wilfrid, “Juni: Shaun Hergatt's Second Act”, in At the Sign of the Pink Pig:
- I'd like to see chef Shaun let his short back-and-sides down and serve that sauce over a rolled, braised veal breast, or a veal cheek (there's a pig's cheek on the 10 course menu).
-