phrase General Slang

rode hard and put up wet

ROHD HARD and PUT up WET · phrase · informal

Worn-out and haggard looking.

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Definitions

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Describes someone looking rough or exhausted, like a horse ridden hard and stabled without cooling down.

“After that all-nighter she looked rode hard and put up wet.”
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rode hard and put up wet In A Sentence

After that all-nighter she looked rode hard and put up wet.

Origin & Usage

Southern/Western horse-culture idiom; a horse put away still sweaty ends up in poor shape.

People Also Ask

What does "rode hard and put up wet" mean?

It means looking worn-out, haggard, or exhausted—as rough as a horse ridden hard then stabled while still sweaty.

Where does it come from?

It's a Southern and Western horse-culture idiom; a horse put away wet without cooling down ends up in poor condition.

How do you use it?

Describe someone looking rough, e.g. "After that all-nighter she looked rode hard and put up wet."

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