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Weather the Storm

Posted on the 21 April 2021 by Idioms

weather the storm,
also, ride out the storm

Meaning

  • handle a difficult period of time successfully
  • survive a serious situation without being harmed in any way
  • reach the end of some hardship or problem without much damage, harm or disorder

Example Sentences

  1. There haven't been any tourists this year, and the hotels, campsites, and restaurants are having to weather the storm until things pick up again.
  2. During the current pandemic, everyone was riding out the storm until they found a vaccine.
  3. When John was made redundant, the family had to weather the storm until he found a new job.
  4. The disgraced politician was left to ride out the storm as he refused to resign.
  5. After all the negative press, his reputation was in tatters, but it was his own fault, so he had to weather the storm.
  6. I am sure that Cally is in the right situation to weather the storm.
  7. I wonder how my son had weathered the storm after lost his job.

Origin

This idiom alludes to a ship surviving a storm at sea or coming safely through awful weather of some kind. The British love to talk about the weather, so it stands to reason that there are several idioms featuring it. This one has been used figuratively since the 1600s, at least.

In History of England in 1849, Thomas Macaulay wrote:

"(They) weathered together the fiercest storms of faction."


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