in tatters
English
editPhrase
edit- Badly torn in many places; in shreds.
- (figurative) Ruined, destroyed, wrecked.
- 2020 July 15, Mike Brown talks to Paul Clifton, “Leading London's "hidden heroes"”, in Rail, page 45:
- Its financial plans for 2020-24, published last December, lie in tatters. TfL Chief Financial Officer Simon Kilonback told his board in June: "It is unlikely, even with significant external support, that we will return to any similar plan or levels of investment in the medium term."
- 2021 September 2, Roger Cohen, “The French Left Is in Disarray, but Here Comes Anne Hidalgo”, in The New York Times[1], →ISSN:
- Most polls give the left, divided between Socialists, ecologists and far-left parties, less than 30 percent of the vote in a France drifting rightward. The once-proud “gauche” is in tatters.
Translations
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References
edit- “in tatters”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–2022.