[rough] See: DIAMOND IN THE ROUGH.
[rough-and-ready]{adj.} 1. Not finished in detail; not perfected;
rough but ready for use now. •/We asked Mr. Brown how long it would take to
drive to Chicago and his rough-and-ready answer was two days./ 2. Not having
nice manners but full of energy and ability. •/Jim is a rough-and-ready
character; he’d rather fight than talk things over./
[rough-and-tumble] 1. {n.} Very rough, hard fighting or arguing that
does not follow any rules. •/There was a rough-and-tumble on the street last
night between some soldiers and sailors./ •/Many people don’t like the
rough-and-tumble of politics./ 2. {adj.} Fighting or arguing in a very
rough and reckless way; struggling hard; not following rules or laws. •/It
took strong men to stay alive in the rough-and-tumble life of the western
frontier./
[rough diamond] See: DIAMOND IN THE ROUGH.
[roughhouse]{n.} Riotous play or commotion. •/? told the boys they
can play in the attic if there is no roughhouse./
[roughhouse]{v.} To play very wildly; be running around as young boys
usually do. •/"Stop roughhousing this minute," Grandma cried. "Your father
will be home soon."/
[rough it]{v. phr.} To live like primitive people; live with little of
the comfort and equipment of civilization. •/Scouts like to rough it in the
woods on weekend hikes./
[roughneck]{n.} A low, coarse fellow. •/The only boys in the
neighborhood are a bunch of roughnecks, and Mrs. Smith is unhappy about the
fact that her son is rapidly becoming one of them./
[rough-shod] See: RIDE ROUGH-SHOD OVER.
[rough sledding] See: HARD SLEDDING.
[rough up]{v.} To attack or hurt physically; treat roughly; beat.
•/Three boys were sent home for a week because they roughed up a player on
the visiting team./ •/While Pete was walking in a strange part of town some
boys roughed him up and told him to stay out of their territory./
[roughly speaking]{adv. phr.} Approximately; in general terms.
•/Roughly speaking, about 250 people attended the annual convention of the
Dictionary Society of America./
[roulette] See: RUSSIAN ROULETTE.
[round] See: BRING AROUND or BRING ROUND, COME ROUND, GO THE ROUNDS, MAKE
ROUNDS, SQUARE PEG IN A ROUND HOLE, YEAR-ROUND.
[round-eyed] or [wide-eyed] also [large-eyed] {adj.} Very much
surprised; astonished; awed. •/The people were round-eyed when they learned
what the computer could do./ •/The children were wide-eyed at the sight of
the Christmas tree and didn’t make a sound./
[round off]{v.} 1. To make round or curved. •/John decided to round
off the corners of the table he was making so that no one would be hurt by
bumping them./ 2. To change to the nearest whole number. •/The teacher said
to round off the averages./ 3. To end in a satisfactory way; put a finishing
touch on; finish nicely. •/We rounded off the dinner with mixed nuts./
•/A boat ride in the moonlight rounded off the day at the lake./ Compare:
TOP OFF.
[round out]{v. phr.} To complete; make whole. •/He needs only one or
two more rare compact discs to round out his collection of Vivaldi./
[round robin]{n. phr.} 1. Something written, especially a request or
protest that is signed by a group of people. — Often used like an adjective.
•/The people in our neighborhood are sending a round robin to the Air Force
to protest the noise the jet planes make flying over our houses./ 2. A letter
written by a group of people each writing one or two paragraphs and then
sending the letter to another person, who adds a paragraph, and so on. •/The
class sent a round-robin letter to Bill in the hospital./ 3. A meeting in
which each one in a group of people takes part; a talk between various members
of a group. — Often used like an adjective. •/There is a round-robin meeting
of expert fishermen on the radio, giving advice on how to catch fish./ 4. A
contest or games in which each player or team plays every other player or team
in turn. — Often used like an adjective. •/The tournament will be a round
robin for all the high school teams in the city./
[rounds] See: GO THE ROUNDS.
[round the clock] See: AROUND THE CLOCK.
[round trip]{n.} A return trip; passage to a place and back. •/The
ticket agent explained that a ticket for a round trip to Hawaii at certain
times of the year may cost less than a one-way ticket during the high
season./
[roundup]{n.} A muster; an inspection; a gathering together. •/The
farmer and his son decided to hold a major roundup of all their cattle to see
that none had been stolen by the bandits./ •/The police roundup of all
suspected drug dealers took place early in the morning./
[round up]{v.} 1. To bring together (cattle or horses). •/Cowboys
round up their cattle in the springtime to brand the new calves./ 2.
{informal} To collect; gather. •/Dave rounded up many names for his
petition./
[row] See: HARD ROW TO HOE or TOUGH ROW TO HOE, HOE ONE’S OWN ROW, SKID
ROW.
[royal road]{n. phr.} A quick means of accomplishment; an easy path.
•/There is no royal road to learning in order to obtain a university
degree./
[rubdown]{n.} A massage. •/The chiropractor gave his patient a
powerful rubdown./
[rub-a-dub]{n.} The sound made by beating a drum. •/We heard a great
rub-a-dub as the parade marched into view./
[rubber check]{n.}, {informal} A check written without enough
money in the bank to make it good. •/Bill got into trouble when he paid his
bills with rubber checks./ •/By the time we knew he had paid us with a
rubber check, the man had left the state./ •/The rubber check bounced./
[rub down]{v. phr.} 1. To dry the body of (an animal or person) by
rubbing. •/Stablemen rub down a horse after a race./ 2. To rub and press
with the fingers on the body of (a person) to loosen muscles or prevent
stiffness; massage. •/Trainers rub down an athlete after hard exercise./
[rub elbows] also [rub shoulders] {v. phr.} To be in the same place
(with others); meet and mix. •/City people and country people, old and young,
rub elbows at the horse show./ •/On a visit to the United Nations Building
in New York, you may rub elbows with people from faraway lands./
[rub it in]{v. phr.}, {slang} To remind a person again and again
of an error or short-coming; tease; nag. •/Jerry was already unhappy because
he fumbled the ball, but his teammates kept rubbing it in./ •/I know my
black eye looks funny. You don’t need to rub it in./
[rub off]{v.} 1. To remove or be removed by rubbing; erase. •/The
teacher rubs the problem off the chalkboard./ •/After Ann shook hands with
the president, she would not shake hands with anyone else because she thought
that the good luck would rub off./ 2. To stick to something touched; come
off. •/Don’t touch that charcoal, it will rub off./ •/Mary’s dress
touched the door that Father was painting, and some paint rubbed off on her
dress./ 3. To pass to someone near as if by touching. •/Jimmy is very
lucky; I wish some of his luck would rub off on me./
[rub out]{v.}, {slang} To destroy completely; kill; eliminate.
•/The gangsters rubbed out four policemen before they were caught./ •/The
gangsters told the storekeeper that if he did not pay them to protect him,
someone would rub him out./ Compare: WIPE OUT, RID OF.