straight-from-the-shoulder

[streyt-fruh m-th uh-shohl-der] /ˈstreɪt frəm ðəˈʃoʊl dər/
adjective
1.
direct, honest, and forceful in expression; outspoken.

shoulder

[shohl-der] /ˈʃoʊl dər/
noun
1.
the part of each side of the body in humans, at the top of the trunk, extending from each side of the base of the neck to the region where the arm articulates with the trunk.
2.
Usually, shoulders. these two parts together with the part of the back joining them.
3.
a corresponding part in animals.
4.
the upper foreleg and adjoining parts of a sheep, goat, etc.
5.
the joint connecting the arm or the foreleg with the trunk.
6.
a shoulderlike part or projection.
7.
Ornithology. the bend of a bird's wing, between the hand and the forearm, especially when distinctively colored, as in the red-shouldered hawk, Buteo lineatus.
8.
a cut of meat that includes the upper joint of the foreleg.
9.
Often, shoulders. Informal. capacity for bearing responsibility or blame or sympathizing with other people:
If you want to tell me your troubles, I have broad shoulders.
10.
a steplike change in the contour of an object, as for opposing or limiting motion along it or for an abutment.
11.
Carpentry.
  1. the end surface or surfaces of a piece from which a tenon or tenons project.
  2. an inclined and raised surface, as on a joggle post, for receiving and supporting the foot of a strut or the like.
12.
Fortification. the angle of a bastion between the face and the flank.
13.
Printing. the flat surface on a type body extending beyond the base of the letter or character.
14.
the part of a garment that covers, or fits over, the shoulder.
15.
(in leather manufacturing) that part of the hide anterior to the butt.
16.
either of the two edges or borders along a road, especially that portion on which vehicles can be parked in emergencies.
Compare soft shoulder.
18.
Furniture. knee (def 6).
verb (used with object)
19.
to push with or as if with the shoulder, especially roughly:
to shoulder someone aside.
20.
to take upon, support, or carry on or as if on the shoulder or shoulders:
He shouldered his knapsack and walked on.
21.
to assume as a responsibility:
to shoulder the expense.
verb (used without object)
22.
to push with or as if with the shoulder:
to shoulder through a crowd.
Idioms
23.
cry on someone's shoulder, to reveal one's problems to another person in order to obtain sympathy:
Don't cry on my shoulder—this mess is your own fault.
24.
put one's shoulder to the wheel, to work energetically toward a goal; put forth effort:
If we put our shoulders to the wheel, we'll be able to finish the job soon.
25.
rub shoulders with, to come into association with; mingle with:
As a social worker in one of the worst slum areas, she rubs shoulders with the poor and the helpless.
26.
shoulder arms, Military.
  1. to place a rifle muzzle upward on the right or left shoulder, with the buttstock in the corresponding hand.
  2. the command to shoulder arms.
27.
shoulder to shoulder, side by side; with united effort:
The volunteers worked shoulder to shoulder with the natives in harvesting the crops.
28.
straight from the shoulder, without evasion; directly; candidly:
The lawyer told him straight from the shoulder that his case was weak.
Origin
before 900; (noun) Middle English sholder, s(c)hulder, Old English sculdor; cognate with Dutch schouder, German Schulter; (v.) Middle English shulderen, derivative of the noun
Related forms
outshoulder, verb (used with object)
reshoulder, verb (used with object)
unshouldered, adjective
Synonyms
21. bear, undertake, carry.
British Dictionary definitions for straight from the shoulder

shoulder

/ˈʃəʊldə/
noun
1.
the part of the vertebrate body where the arm or a corresponding forelimb joins the trunk: the pectoral girdle and associated structures
2.
the joint at the junction of the forelimb with the pectoral girdle
3.
a cut of meat including the upper part of the foreleg
4.
(printing) the flat surface of a piece of type from which the face rises
5.
(tanning) the portion of a hide covering the shoulders and neck of the animal, usually including the cheeks
6.
the part of a garment that covers the shoulder
7.
anything that resembles a shoulder in shape or position
8.
the strip of unpaved land that borders a road
9.
(engineering) a substantial projection or abrupt change in shape or diameter designed to withstand thrust
10.
(photog) the portion of the characteristic curve of a photographic material indicating the maximum density that can be produced on the material
11.
(jewellery) the part of a ring where the shank joins the setting
12.
a shoulder to cry on, a person one turns to for sympathy with one's troubles
13.
(informal) give someone the cold shoulder
  1. to treat someone in a cold manner; snub
  2. to ignore or shun someone
14.
(informal) put one's shoulder to the wheel, to work very hard
15.
rub shoulders with, See rub (sense 11)
16.
shoulder to shoulder
  1. side by side or close together
  2. in a corporate effort
verb
17.
(transitive) to bear or carry (a burden, responsibility, etc) as if on one's shoulders
18.
to push (something) with or as if with the shoulder
19.
(transitive) to lift or carry on the shoulders
20.
(military) shoulder arms, to bring the rifle vertically close to the right side with the muzzle uppermost and held at the trigger guard
Word Origin
Old English sculdor; related to Old High German sculterra
Word Origin and History for straight from the shoulder

shoulder

n.

Old English sculdor "shoulder," from West Germanic *skuldro (cf. Middle Dutch scouder, Dutch schouder, Old Frisian skoldere, Middle Low German scholder, Old High German scultra, German Schulter), of unknown origin, perhaps related to shield (n.). Meaning "edge of the road" is attested from 1933. Cold shoulder (Neh. ix:29) translates Latin humerum recedentum dare in Vulgate (but see cold shoulder). Shoulder-length, of hair, is from 1951.

v.

c.1300, "to push with the shoulder," from shoulder (n.). Meaning "take a burden" first recorded 1580s. The military sense is from 1590s. Related: Shouldered; shouldering.

straight from the shoulder in Medicine

shoulder shoul·der (shōl'dər)
n.

  1. The joint connecting the arm with the torso.

  2. The part of the human body between the neck and upper arm.

Slang definitions & phrases for straight from the shoulder

straight from the shoulder

adverb phrase

Honestly and directly; unflinchingly; straight: He gave it to us straight from the shoulder

[1856+; perhaps from the notion of an honest blow delivered straight from the shoulder rather than deviously, from the side, etc]


shoulder

Related Terms

cold shoulder, straight from the shoulder


Idioms and Phrases with straight from the shoulder

straight from the shoulder

In a direct, forthright manner, as in I'll tell you, straight from the shoulder, that you'll have to do better or they'll fire you. This expression comes from boxing, where it describes a blow delivered with full force. Its figurative use dates from the late 1800s.
Encyclopedia Article for straight from the shoulder

shoulder

in anatomy, the joint between the arm, or forelimb, and the trunk, together with the adjacent tissue, particularly the tissue over the shoulder blade, or scapula. The shoulder, or pectoral, girdle is composed of the clavicles (collarbones) and the scapulae (shoulder blades). In humans the clavicles join the sternum (breastbone) medially and the scapulae laterally; the scapulae, however, are joined to the trunk only by muscles. In many cursorial (running) mammals the clavicles are reduced or no longer present, which permits free movement of the humerus (upper arm bone) in a forward direction. The major joint of the shoulder is the glenohumeral joint, a ball-and-socket joint in which the humerus is recessed into the scapula. The flexibility of the shoulder has permitted various locomotor adaptations, such as digging (in moles), running (in antelopes), brachiation (in gibbons), and flight (in birds).

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