Die with your boots on

To "Die with your boots on" is an idiom referring to dying while fighting or to die while actively occupied/employed/working or in the middle of some action. A person who dies with their boots on keeps working to the end, as in "He’ll never quit—he’ll die with his boots on." The implication here is that they die while living their life as usual, and not of old age and being bedridden with illness, infirmity, etc.

Origin

The "Die with your boots on" idiom originates from frontier towns in the 19th-century American West.[1] Some sources (e.g., American Heritage Dictionary of Idioms) say that the phrase probably originally alluded to soldiers who died on active duty. The Oxford Dictionary of Idioms says: "Die with your boots on was apparently first used in the late 19th century of deaths of cowboys and others in the American West who were killed in gun battles or hanged." Cassell's Dictionary of Slang adds that from the late 17th century until the early 19th century the expression meant "to be hanged," and from the mid 17th century until the mid 19th century "Die in one's shoes" meant the same thing.

gollark: Being able to program microcontrollers is mildly cool, but it also means I have to wait for an electronics assembler, they can't interact with external components, and they're very irritating to debug (apparently *deliberately?!*). CC computers boot fairly quickly anyway.
gollark: CC workflow for setting up a computer to do things:- (auto)craft computer- place computer- write code/download code onto computer as startupOC workflow:- figure out what cards/other components it needs- queue autocrafting for everything- wait a while while autocrafting runs, and possibly converts some coal into diamonds- pull autocrafted stuff out of ME network, put into computers, be sure to get the right items- find openOS disk, disk drive- install openOS- write/download code- either move code to `boot` or work out how `rc` works
gollark: I play on servers. I can't just edit the recipes.
gollark: Even with autocrafting I still have to queue up all the parts and fetch them from storage and install them every time I want a new computer.
gollark: I mean, personally I just find it less annoying than OC because I don't have to microcraft (or program AE recipes for) 89126871258 parts.

References

  1. Rospond, Brandon (31 March 2015). Wild West Exodus Anthology. Winged Hussar Publishing. p. 69. ISBN 9780996365765.
  2. von Tunzelmann, Alex (12 February 2009). "They Died With Their Boots On: overdressed, overblown and so over". The Guardian. Guardian News & Media Limited. Retrieved 29 March 2019.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.