Run foul of (someone or something) In english explanation

The meaning, explanation, definition and origin of the idiom/phrase "run foul of (someone or something)", English Idiom Dictionary ( also found in Vietnamese )

author Jimmy Hung calendar 2022-01-04 05:01

Meaning of Run foul of (someone or something) (redirected from run afoul of (someone or something) )

Run afoul of (someone or something) verb phrase

Used when a boat or vessel collide with something

The boat has run afoul of the massive stone during the storm.

The vessel ran afoul of the icebergs and could not move.

Used when one does something that he or she is not allowed to do, especially disobeying rules or laws

She ran afoul of the university and got kicked out for plagiarizing.

Players who run afoul of the rules will be expelled from the pitch.

Other phrases about:

bash (someone's) brains in

To hit, attack or strike someone in a way that causes serious injury or death

the British disease

Used in reference to the period of the economic stagnation that troubled British people, government, or society in the 1970s and early 1980s

fly into (someone or something)

To crash into someone or something while moving in the air

smurf attack

A denial-of-service attack.

show (someone) the back of (one's) hand

To reproach someone, to show disdain; to smack someone with the backside of one's hand.

Grammar and Usage of Run afoul of (someone or something)

Verb Forms

  • run afoul of (someone or something)
  • runs afoul of (someone or something)
  • ran afoul of (someone or something)
  • to run afoul of (someone or something)
  • running afoul of (someone or something)

The verb "run" should be conjugated according to its tense.

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TODAY
Let not poor Nelly starve
One of the last words of King Charles II when he asked his brother to look after Nell (his mistress)
Example: King Charles II did indeed have many mistresses, Nell was one. "Let not poor Nelly starve" he said.
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