Results for “hold your horses now”
Wait; slow down; be patient.
A defensive midfielder shielding the back line.
Command to keep holding and not sell during a panic.
Collectively refusing to sell during a downturn.
Shut the door; you're wasting the AC or heat.
Being present for someone's feelings without trying to fix them.
Turning a small early lead into an unstoppable one.
Welsh oxymoron meaning 'soon-ish' — could be five minutes, could be an hour.
A merry-go-round, specifically the antique one in City Park.
Dallas tag phrase — 'know what I'm talking about?'
RAF Police, named for their white-topped service caps.
Insulated sleeve for a beer bottle or can.
Overwhelmed with work
In a little while, or a short while ago.
In a moment (Caribbean time: could be a while)
Triceps so developed they form a horseshoe shape.
A catch with the ball sticking out of the glove's tip.
A small, unfancied team.
Anyone affected by or invested in a project.
Nothing but; only
Neither
Bad-tempered or irritable.
'You know' — a conversational tag.
Losses or gains compounding rapidly out of control.
Continuing to hold a position that has collapsed in value.
Fire-control order: do not fire except in self-defense.
Heavily sedated to the point of unresponsiveness
Minnesota sentence-tag that softly invites agreement.
'You already know' — an emphatic yes, agreement, or confirmation.
The poor soul left holding a worthless investment after everyone else cashed out.
Someone stuck holding a worthless or crashed asset, left holding the bag while others cashed out.
Northern English for 'nothing'.
Hopelessly square, dull, or worthless — going nowhere, leading nowhere.
Only genuine, loyal people understand or remember this — said with knowing pride.
To genuinely know what you're talking about — to have real knowledge or taste on a subject.
Employees withholding knowledge and ideas from their employer.
Be patient; hold your horses
A scheme to hype a coin up, sell at the peak, and leave latecomers holding the crash.
Holding an unexpected spot instead of the standard one.
The defender who stays glued to a bombsite and holds it no matter what.