To blame someone else for an error.
The idiom don't pass the buck don't pass along your responsibility. An example using the idiom is: If you do something unkind or silly don't pass the buckThat's all from me see ya later!
"Don't pass the buck" IS an idiom. It means don't pass along the responsibility.
It means to hand a bucket down the line to someone else. Perhaps you heard the idiom "pass the BUCK," which means to pass the responsibility to someone else.
Nobody wanted to do the job, so we all past the buck. Joe passed the buck.
The idiom buck up means to cheer up. For example one might say "she began to buck up once I showed her some photographs of her children when they were younger."
To pass the buck means to pass the responsibility for something on to someone else. The saying originated from poker, where the buck was the marker that indicated whose deal it was. Passing it meant passing the responsibility for the deal.
Do not pass the buck means to not pass off your responsibility onto others; or simply, do not say, "I will go get someone else to do it."
forget the things that have pass
It's not something you hear - it's "The buck stops here." Both sayings refer to passing on responsibility. If you "pass the buck," you refuse to accept responsibility for whatever's going on, and if it stops here, you do accept it.
Pass the Buck - 2002 is rated/received certificates of: Australia:G
Pass the Buck - Australian game show - ended in 2002.
The cast of Pass the Buck - 2005 includes: Freddie Minahan as Extra