[corn belt]{n.} 1. The Midwest; the agricultural section of the United
States where much corn is grown. •/Kansas is one of the slates that lies
within the corn belt./
[corner] See: AROUND THE CORNER, CUT CORNERS, FOUR CORNERS, OUT OF THE
CORNER OF ONE’S EYE.
[cost a bomb] or [an arm and a leg] {v. phr.} To be extremely
expensive. •/My new house has cost us an arm and a leg and we’re almost
broke./
[cotton] See: ON TOP OF THE WORLD also SITTING ON HIGH COTTON.
[cotton picking], [cotton-pickin']{adj.}, {slang},
{colloquial} Worthless, crude, common, messy. •/Keep your cotton picking
hands off my flowers!/ •/You’ve got to clean up your room, son, this is a
cotton-pickin' mess!/
[couch case]{n.}, {slang}, {informal} A person judged
emotionally so disturbed that people think he ought to see a psychiatrist (who,
habitually, make their patients lie down on a couch). •/Joe’s divorce messed
him up so badly that he became a couch case./
[couch doctor]{n.}, {slang}, {colloquial} A psychoanalyst who
puts his patients on a couch following the practice established by Sigmund
Freud. •/I didn’t know your husband was a couch doctor, I thought he was a
gynecologist!/
[couch potato]{n.} A person who is addicted to watching television all
day. •/Poor Ted has become such a couch potato that we can’t persuade him to
do anything./
[cough up]{v.}, {slang} 1. To give (money) unwillingly; pay with
an effort. •/Her husband coughed up the money for the party with a good deal
of grumbling./ 2. To tell what was secret; make known. •/He coughed up the
whole story for the police./
[couldn’t care less]{v. phr.}, {informal} To be indifferent; not
care at all. •/The students couldn’t care less about the band; they talk all
through the concert./ Also heard increasingly as "could care less"
(nonstandard in this form.)
[counsel] See: KEEP ONE’S OWN COUNSEL.
[count] See: STAND UP AND BE COUNTED.
[countdown]{n.}. {Space English}, {informal} 1. A step-by-step
process which leads to the launching of a rocket. •/Countdown starts at 23:00
hours tomorrow night and continues for 24 hours./ 2. Process of counting
inversely during the acts leading to a launch; liftoff occurs at zero. 3. The
time immediately preceding an important undertaking, borrowed from Space
English. •/We’re leaving for Hawaii tomorrow afternoon; this is countdown
time for us./
[counter] See: UNDER THE COUNTER.
[count heads] or [count noses] {v. phr.}, {informal} To count
the number of people in a group. •/On the class picnic, we counted heads
before we left and when we arrived to be sure that no one got lost./ •/The
usher was told to look out into the audience and count noses./
[count off]{v.} 1. To count aloud from one end of a line of men to the
other, each man counting in turn. •/The soldiers counted off from right to
left./ 2. To place into a separate group or groups by counting. •/The coach
counted off three boys to carry in the equipment./ •/Tom counted off enough
newspapers for his route./
[count on]{v.} 1. To depend on; rely on; trust. •/The team was
counting on Joe to win the race./ •/I’ll do it; you know you can count on
me./ •/The company was counting on Brown’s making the right decision./
Syn.: BANK ON. 2. See: FIGURE ON(2).
[count one’s chickens before they’re hatched]{v. phr.}, {informal}
To depend on getting a profit or gain before you have it; make plans that
suppose something will happen; be too sure that something will happen. Usually
used in negative sentences. •/When Jim said that he would be made captain of
the team, John told him not to count his chickens before they were hatched./
•/Maybe some of your customers won’t pay, and then where will you be? Don’t
count your chickens before they’re hatched./
[count out]{v.} 1. To leave (someone) out of a plan; not expect
(someone) to share in an activity; exclude. •/"Will this party cost anything?
If it does, count me out, because I’m broke."/ •/When the coach was
planning who would play in the big game he counted Paul out, because Paul had a
hurt leg./ 2. To count out loud to ten to show that (a boxer who has been
knocked down in a fight) is beaten or knocked out if he does not get up before
ten is counted. •/The champion was counted. out in the third round./ 3a. To
add up; count again to be sure of the amount. •/Mary counted out the number
of pennies she had./ 3b. To count out loud, (especially the beats in a
measure of music). •/The music teacher counted out the beats
"one-two-three-four," so the class would sing in time./
[count to ten]{v. phr.}, {informal} To count from one to ten so
you will have time to calm down or get control of yourself; put off action when
angry or excited so as not to do anything wrong. •/Father always told us to
count to ten before doing anything when we got angry./ Compare: KEEP ONE’S
HEAD. Contrast: BLOW A FUSE, FLY OFF THE HANDLE.
[county mounty]{n.}, {slang}, {citizen’s hand radio jargon}
Sheriff’s deputy. •/The county mounties are parked under the bridge./
[courage] See: HAVE THE COURAGE OF ONE’S CONVICTIONS, SCREW UP ONE’S
COURAGE.
[course] See: IN DUE COURSE, MATTER OF COURSE, OF COURSE, PAR FOR THE
COURSE.
[court] See: DAY IN COURT, FRONT COURT, HOLD COURT, KANGAROO COURT.
[cousin] See: FIRST COUSIN, SECOND COUSIN.
[cover] See: FROM COVER TO COVER at FROM --- TO(3), UNDER COVER.
[cover a lot of ground]{v. phr.} To process a great deal of
information and various facts. •/Professor Brown’s thorough lecture on
asteroids covered a lot of ground today./
[covered-dish supper] or [potluck supper] A meal to which each guest
brings a share of the food. •/Dolly made a chicken casserole for the
covered-dish supper./
[cover girl]{n.} A pretty girl or woman whose picture is put on the
cover of a magazine. •/Ann is not a cover girl, but she is pretty enough to
be./
[cover ground] or [cover the ground] {v. phr.} 1. To go a distance;
travel. •/Mr. Rogers likes to travel in planes, because they cover ground so
quickly./ 2. {informal} To move over an area at a speed that is pleasing;
move quickly over a lot of ground. •/The new infielder really covers the
ground at second base./ •/Herby’s new car really covers ground!/ 3. To
give or receive the important facts and details about a subject. •/If you’re
thinking about a trip to Europe, the airline has a booklet that covers the
ground pretty well./ •/The class spent two days studying the Revolutionary
War, because they couldn’t cover that much ground in one day./
[cover one’s tracks] or [cover up one’s tracks] {v. phr.} 1. To
hide and not leave anything, especially foot marks, to show where you have
been, so that no one can follow you. •/The deer covered his tracks by running
in a stream./ 2. {informal} To hide or not say where you have been or
what you have done; not tell why you do something or what you plan to do.
•/The boys covered their tracks when they went swimming by saying that they
were going for a walk./ Compare: COVER UP(1).
[cover the waterfront]{v. phr.} To talk or write all about something;
talk about something all possible ways. •/The principal pretty well covered
the waterfront on student behavior./