Advertisement
Advertisement
tough break
Also, tough luck. A trying or troublesome circumstance, bad luck, as in He got a tough break when he was denied a raise, or Tough luck for the team last night. This idiom uses tough in the sense of “difficult,” a usage dating from the early 1600s. The variant is also used as a sarcastic interjection, as in So you didn't make straight A's—tough luck! A slangy variant of this interjection is tough beans, and a ruder version is tough shit. [Colloquial; c. 1900]
Example Sentences
“It still is 100% their responsibility to provide power and gas. … If they lose money doing it, tough break,” said Cruikshank, who will be at the meeting.
Gilbert got a tough break when Jose Miranda hit a swinging bunt that turned into an infield single and loaded the bases.
“It was a tough break for us, there’s no doubt about it,” Rivers said when asked about Portis’ early departure.
He credited doctors and nurses for catching what he called a “tough break.”
“Tough break,” Siraj tells me when we’re in the hall.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse