haul one's ashes
verbDefinitions
To move one's body
To move one's body; to move away, depart.
- Now ye and yore boys jest haul yore ashes and start makin' tracks back to the Yellowstone.
- "Then leave, you yeller-belly!" Luttie said. "You're paid up. Haul your ashes." "I believe I'll just do that little thing. I'm pullin' out...."
- Tate uncorked a haymaker, and Starbuck ducked low, belted him in the gut.... The impact buckled Tate.... He was out cold.... "Anybody [referring to Starbuck] that can haul Sam Tate's ashes is my kinda of man...."
To have sexual intercourse.
- "George Brent has got one hell of a schlong on him," Tabitha ventures. "And how!" Lucy agrees enthusiastically. "I'd haul his ashes for him any time."
- Just do me a favor: if you decide to haul her ashes, don't tell Victory. He's got a crush on her, and so far she won't give him any play.
- I still get beautiful ladies to haul my ashes when my old balls get heavy.
The neighborhood
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for haul one's ashes. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA