stick (your) oar in

stick (your) oar in
put/stick (your) oar in British & Australian, informal to involve yourself in a discussion or a situation when other people do not want you to.

I don't want Janet coming to the meeting and sticking her oar in - she knows nothing about the situation.


New idioms dictionary. 2014.

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  • stick your oar in — stick/put/shove/your oar in british informal phrase to give your opinion about something that other people are discussing without being asked to We were fine until you stuck your oar in. Thesaurus: to give your opinionsynon …   Useful english dictionary

  • get/put/stick your oar in — Brit informal : to give people your opinion when they do not want it • • • Main Entry: ↑oar …   Useful english dictionary

  • put your oar in — stick/put/shove/your oar in british informal phrase to give your opinion about something that other people are discussing without being asked to We were fine until you stuck your oar in. Thesaurus: to give your opinionsynon …   Useful english dictionary

  • put (your) oar in — put/stick (your) oar in British & Australian, informal to involve yourself in a discussion or a situation when other people do not want you to. I don t want Janet coming to the meeting and sticking her oar in she knows nothing about the situation …   New idioms dictionary

  • shove your oar in — stick/put/shove/your oar in british informal phrase to give your opinion about something that other people are discussing without being asked to We were fine until you stuck your oar in. Thesaurus: to give your opinionsynon …   Useful english dictionary

  • oar — [ ɔr ] noun count a long stick with a wide flat blade at one end, used for ROWING a boat stick your oar in BRITISH INFORMAL to give your opinion about something that other people are discussing without being asked to …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • oar — noun (C) 1 a long pole with a wide flat blade at one end, used for rowing a boat compare paddle 1 (1) 2 put/shove/stick your oar in BrE informal to join in a discussion without being asked to …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • oar — [o: US o:r] n [: Old English; Origin: ar] 1.) a long pole with a wide flat blade at one end, used for rowing a boat →↑paddle 2.) put/stick/get your oar in BrE informal to get involved in a conversation or situation when the other people do not… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • oar — UK [ɔː(r)] / US [ɔr] noun [countable] Word forms oar : singular oar plural oars a long stick with a wide flat blade at one end, used for rowing a boat • stick/put/shove your oar in British informal to give your opinion about something that other… …   English dictionary

  • American and British English differences — For the Wikipedia editing policy on use of regional variants in Wikipedia, see Wikipedia:Manual of style#National varieties of English. This is one of a series of articles about the differences between British English and American English, which …   Wikipedia

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