English
Alternative forms
Verb
have the world by the tail
- (idiomatic) To possess great influence and opportunity.
- 1919, William MacLeod Raine, A Man Four-Square, ch. 15:
- "Webb thinks he's got the world by the tail for a downhill pull. I'll show him."
- 1938 Feb. 28, "Give Us Colonies!!," Time (retrieved 7 August 2013):
- No nation had the World by the tail this week, but the rear end of the British lion was within measurable distance of Adolf Hitler's grasp.
- 1992 Sept. 24, Sara Rimer, "Company News: Hearing the Fears, With No Answers," New York Times (retrieved 7 August 2013):
- "You think you're set. You think everything's taken care of. I thought I had the world by the tail."
Usage notes
- Also appears in such similar phrases as grab the world by the tail, got the world by the tail.
- Often used in describing a situation in which a person possesses great, and perhaps excessive, self-confidence.
See also