hollow leg

noun
/ˌhɒl.əʊ ˈlɛɡ/UK/ˌhɑ.loʊ ˈlɛɡ/US

Etymology

Humorously suggesting a further place where a person's body might store food once the stomach has filled up. Compare fill one's boots.

Definitions

  1. Capacity to eat large quantities.

    • When I was young and growing a lot, and Mama couldn't feed me enough, she used to say I had a hollow leg.
    • Fannie Jump Creighton had a hollow leg, as the saying goes, and Idabelle was so fat, if she tripped coming up the hill she'd roll all the way to the bottom.
    • My brother, who had recently overtaken me in height and then racked up another six inches, ate to fill his hollow leg. My father did better than expected, too, eating two pieces of pie with our amaretto-flavored whipped cream.
  2. Ability or tendency to drink large quantities of alcohol.

    • I didn't want his unhappiness or his pain, or his personality changes, but I wanted to drink as much, as often. I certainly wanted his hollow leg.
    • Where was Uncle? Gone for a stiff one? Again? His hollow leg, you know. Ducking in the john to throw up on his loafers? Probably that. What did he have tonight? Anything good?

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for hollow leg. 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