get your day in court

get your day in court
get/have (your) day in court American & Australian to get an opportunity to give your opinion on something or to explain your actions after they have been criticized.

She was fiercely determined to get her day in court and the TV interview would give it to her.


New idioms dictionary. 2014.

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

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  • have your day in court — get/have (your) day in court American & Australian to get an opportunity to give your opinion on something or to explain your actions after they have been criticized. She was fiercely determined to get her day in court and the TV interview would… …   New idioms dictionary

  • have your day in court — phrase to get the opportunity to defend yourself from criticism Thesaurus: to defend or protect yourselfsynonym Main entry: day …   Useful english dictionary

  • get day in court — get/have (your) day in court American & Australian to get an opportunity to give your opinion on something or to explain your actions after they have been criticized. She was fiercely determined to get her day in court and the TV interview would… …   New idioms dictionary

  • have your day in court — to get the opportunity to defend yourself from criticism …   English dictionary

  • have day in court — get/have (your) day in court American & Australian to get an opportunity to give your opinion on something or to explain your actions after they have been criticized. She was fiercely determined to get her day in court and the TV interview would… …   New idioms dictionary

  • day — [ deı ] noun *** 1. ) count one of the periods of time that a week is divided into, equal to 24 hours: We re going away for five days. The animals are kept inside for 14 hours a day. 24 hours a day (=during the whole of the day and night): The… …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • court — I [[t]kɔ͟ː(r)t[/t]] NOUN USES ♦ courts 1) N COUNT: oft n N, N n, also in/at N A court is a place where legal matters are decided by a judge and jury or by a magistrate. At this rate, we could find ourselves in the divorce courts! ...a county… …   English dictionary

  • day — [[t]de͟ɪ[/t]] ♦ days 1) N COUNT A day is one of the seven twenty four hour periods of time in a week. 2) N VAR Day is the time when it is light, or the time when you are up and doing things. The weather did not help; hot by day, cold at night...… …   English dictionary

  • get — [ get ] (past tense got [ gat ] ; past participle gotten [ gatn ] ) verb *** ▸ 1 obtain/receive ▸ 2 become/start to be ▸ 3 do something/have something done ▸ 4 move to/from ▸ 5 progress in activity ▸ 6 fit/put something in a place ▸ 7 understand… …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • get — /get/ verb past tense got, past participle got especially BrE gotten especially AmE present participle getting RECEIVE/OBTAIN 1 RECEIVE (transitive not in passive) to be given or receive something: Sharon always seems to get loads of mail. | Why… …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

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