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To slug means to hit, so it means hitting you until you can't think straight.

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Elnora Hickle

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2y ago
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AnswerBot

4d ago

The idiom "slugging the sense out of" means to aggressively attack or criticize someone until they are confused or disoriented. It implies a forceful and relentless assault on someone's reasoning or understanding.

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Q: What does the idiom slugging the sense out of mean?
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Related questions

What does the idiom mean Slugging the sense out of you?

To slug means to hit, so it means hitting you until you can't think straight.


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adds up, makes sense


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How do you identify an idiom?

An idiom is a phrase that appears to make sense, but actually has another meaning. If the sentence makes sense, but seems to mean something besides what it looks like, then it is an idiom. "Frank kicked the bucket" makes perfect sense, and when you realize that it means "Frank died," you have two different meanings.


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"To bug" in this sense means "to bother." It means "stop bothering me."


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What is idiom misuse?

An idiom misuse is to use and idiom in a wrong way that doesn't make sense.


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An idiom usually is a sentence, or part of one. It certainly can be used as part of a sentence. The way to tell if it's an idiom is if it makes sense the way it's literally written.


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