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Meaning of lash oneself to the mast | Babel Free

Verb CEFR C2

Definitions

  1. To continue in a course of action even when facing great difficulties and likely disaster.
  2. To resist the temptation to make a bad choice.

Examples

“I hoped not—all authorities seemed to agree the only thing a man could do in such weather was lash himself to the mast and pray. I made a last stubborn attempt to pour logic on the troubled waters.”
“At the same time, even as he and Bobby still plot to overthrow Fidel, they are at odds over whether to dump Vietnam's president Diêm overboard, or lash him to the mast and ride out the gale blowing in from Vietnam.”
“She was not going to allow Gregory Winston Fallows to throw his life—and hers—away. Whatever demons were torturing him, she vowed that she would lash herself to the mast and hold on.”
“Vance did not have to lash himself to the mast of the sinking Confederate ship and go down nobly to principled defeat.”
“Kruse, in a Vanity Fair article published on November 27, writes that during the impeachment inquiry presently taking place in the U.S. House of Representatives, “Trump loyalists” have “lashed themselves to the presidential mast” — and Kruse stresses that “if Watergate is an American parable, most of them will go down too.””
“The only way in which she could contain her despairing and murderous rage was to lash herself to the mast of her towering superego.”
“Maybe because he's deaf, he won't have to lash himself to the mast to avoid our cries.”
“I had shown her written proof of what I kept saying to her: that she shouldn't rush straight to the baby every time it cried, that she had to try and steel herself, to lash herself to the mast and endure her baby's sobbing while it learned to fall asleep on its own.”
“He says that women need to bite the bullet, to sacrifice all their security, their comfort, their children even, for art. Women need to be prepared to lash themselves to the mast of a boat, like Turner, just to see what it's like.”

CEFR level

C2
Mastery
This word is part of the CEFR C2 vocabulary — mastery level.

See also

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