dance to someone's tune

English edit

Verb edit

dance to someone's tune (third-person singular simple present dances to someone's tune, present participle dancing to someone's tune, simple past and past participle danced to someone's tune)

  1. To do what someone demands or expects, do as told, defer to someone's wishes or demands, do someone's bidding.
    • 1995, M.K. Gupta, How To Remain Ever Happy, →ISBN:
      You simply become a puppet in the hands of others who will make you dance to their tune. In other words, you reduce yourself to a slave or beggar by mortgaging your happiness on the mercy of others.
    • 2011, God'spower E O Udjor, The Dance of Herodias Daughter: Revealing Satan’s Last Deception in the Church, →ISBN, page 51:
      Satan doesn't care whether they carry the bible; he doesn't care whether they say Jesus is Lord. That's not his problem; he has successfully used them to create a counterfeit church to confuse the populace. He knows they are already his and they dance to his tune ... their destiny is sealed.
    • 2012, E.V. Thompson, Dream Traders, →ISBN:
      If the other traders followed our example, relations between Britain and China would improve dramatically. Think about it the next time you go off in a huff because the Chinese won't dance to your tune.'
    • 2014, Bernadette Reynolds, Dance to Your Own Tune, →ISBN, page 1:
      We are on earth to dance to our own tune! We have to know who I the individual is.

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