cheat the hangman
English
Etymology
In full "cheat the hangman of his fee", since a hangman would not be paid if there was nobody to hang.
Verb
cheat the hangman (third-person singular simple present cheats the hangman, present participle cheating the hangman, simple past and past participle cheated the hangman)
- To die, especially by suicide, while under sentence of death, or while guilty of a capital crime; also to kill someone else who is in such a state.
- 1831 Richard Longeville Vowell and William D. Mahoney, Campaigns and Cruises, in Venezuela and New Grenada, and in the Pacific Ocean (Longman) page 69:
- I sincerely hope, for your sake, that Don Beltran may expiate his treason, on the old Spanish gibbet in the Recoveco, as soon as Caraccas is a little more quiet; unless, indeed, the earthquake has already cheated the hangman of his fee, as is most probable.
- 2007 Bernard Wasserstein Barbarism and Civilization: A History of Europe in our Time (→ISBN):
- Twelve were condemned to death by hanging, among them Göring, who cheated the hangman by swallowing a cyanide tablet in his cell.
- 1831 Richard Longeville Vowell and William D. Mahoney, Campaigns and Cruises, in Venezuela and New Grenada, and in the Pacific Ocean (Longman) page 69:
- To escape punishment for one's crimes; to get away with something
- 2000 Alice Freifeld Nationalism and the Crowd in Liberal Hungary, 1848-1914 (→ISBN), page 107:
- Rozsa's escapes from the gendarmerie were followed closely by the invisible crowd, and every time he cheated the hangman his legend grew.
- 2000 Alice Freifeld Nationalism and the Crowd in Liberal Hungary, 1848-1914 (→ISBN), page 107: