cowboy up
English
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Verb
editcowboy up (third-person singular simple present cowboys up, present participle cowboying up, simple past and past participle cowboyed up)
- To deal with hardship with toughness and without complaining; man up.
- 2004, Mary Ann Van Osdell, Hands Pointed Up, →ISBN, page 61:
- COWBOY UP!! Be a man, son. Walk it off, says the coach.
- 2012, Mel Leslie, A Cowboy's Journey Through My Eyes: A Book of Poems, →ISBN, page 11:
- “Cowboy up!”, your excuses are gettin thin!
- 2014, Sam Welch, What's Your Problem, Cowboy?, →ISBN:
- Now they think we can't cowboy up, but we could show'em a thang or three.
- 2018 August 5, “Writers on the Range: To survive we need immigrants working the land”, in The Durango Herald:
- It's past time to cowboy up and do what's right, even if it means accepting the stigma involved in visibly and vocally standing up for good people like Paco and Lupe.
- August 24, 2018, “A Suicide on the Farm”, in CNN:
- Men in rural America are taught to "cowboy up" and not speak of depression.
- (idiomatic, LGBTQ) To put on a more heterosexual manner, in order to fit in.
Synonyms
edit(put on a heterosexual manner): hutch up