rat — Figures of Speech:
1.
rat (noun) =
(a) a worthless, disloyal, dangerous man
(b) {in labour unions} a term used for non-union employers or breakers of union contracts
2.
“Rats!” (interjection) = an expression used for some interjections which are considered vulgar, and also to mean ‘Nonsense!’
3.
to rat (verb) = to break a promise; to be disloyal
4.
to rat on someone = to betray; to cheat someone
5.
rat-like = (of a person) unattractive and suspicious
6.
ratty = (of someone) in a bad or irritable temper; annoyed
7.
lab rat = scientists or research assistants who spend a lot of time working in a laboratory, usually experimenting on animals
8.
rat’s tail = a tool – a kind of file in the shape of a rat’s tail
9.
rat-race = the endless competition for success and wealth among businessmen
10.
rat’s nest = a state of confusion, excitement or trouble
11.
rat bag = an unusually foolish person; a nasty, troublesome person
12.
to rat hole (verb) = (of a person) to store up food material
13.
rat-tat (or rat-a-tat) [used as a ‘sound of knocking on a door’]
14.
(a) as wet as a drowned rat
(b) to look like a drowned rat
= (of someone) completely wet by rain or immersion
15.
as miserable as a rat in a tar-barrel (in a very depressed state)
16.
(a) as cold/poor/sick/weak as a rat
(b) as drunk/fierce/rank as a rat
17.
as fit as a buck rat
18.
as flash as a rat with a gold tooth (‘flash’ = happy, showy)
19.
as rough as rats [said of ruthless, aggressive and selfish people]
20.
to look like a rat’s nest [said of a dirty, nasty disorder – of a place or situation]
21.
to smell a rat = to guess that something wrong is happening or to suspect some hidden danger or disadvantage
22.
(a) to get a rat (or ‘rats’)
(b) to have a rat (or ‘rats’)
= (of a person) to go mad; to become peculiar or unusually strange/odd
23.
rats leave a sinking ship [said of people who leave someone or someplace as soon as they guess or suspect that their positions are at risk or they are not going to get any benefit]
24.
so mean he wouldn’t give a rat a railway pie (‘mean’ = very bad or very miserly) [said of a miser, a person who does not want to spend money or does not want to give away any of his money to other]
25.
one doesn’t get rats out of mice [said of qualities or character that children get or do not get from their parents, i.e. if the parents are bad, the children are also bad]
26.
to look like a streak of rat’s piss = (of something, usually a drink) thin and nasty
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