take the wind out of someone's sails

English edit

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Etymology edit

Referring to the idea of a ship that intercepts the wind of another, causing it to slow or stop.

Pronunciation edit

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Verb edit

take the wind out of someone's sails (third-person singular simple present takes the wind out of someone's sails, present participle taking the wind out of someone's sails, simple past took the wind out of someone's sails, past participle taken the wind out of someone's sails)

  1. (idiomatic) To discourage someone greatly; to cause someone to lose hope or the will to continue; to thwart or minimize someone's ambitions.
    • c. 1860, Louisa May Alcott, Aunt Kipp:
      "I tell you Van Bahr Lamb is a fool." []
      But Polly [] completely took the wind out of her sails, by coolly remarking,— "I like fools."
    • 1922, Frances Hodgson Burnett, chapter 31, in The Head of the House of Coombe:
      Could he have some elderly idea of wanting a youngster for a wife? Occasionally an old chap did. Serve him right if some young chap took the wind out of his sails.
    • 1990 May 27, Serge Schmemann, “German rightist quits after party suffers setback”, in New York Times, retrieved 17 July 2011:
      [T]he Republicans [] have been repeatedly battered in the polls since German unification became a mainstream German concern and took the wind out of their sails.
    • 2011 April 14, “Quotes of the Day”, in Time:
      "It took the wind out of our sails," he says. "I had no Plan B. I was a wreck."
    • 2023, “Let the Sun Come In”, in Relentless, performed by The Pretenders:
      A bunch of myths, a bunch of tales / To take the wind out of our sails / They even say that we must die / I don't believe it, that's a lie

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