Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. idiom US informal. Add to word list. with so many problems or so much work that you are finding it difficult to deal with something: We're down in the weeds here with customer service. The cooks were so deep in the weeds, they were threatening to walk out.

  2. Totally immersed in or preoccupied with the details or complexities (of something). I'd like to come out tonight, but I'm deep in the weeds with my thesis. When I left them at the library, they were deep in the weeds analyzing Mrs. Dalloway for their presentation. I think you're too deep in the weeds to see a solution.

  3. People also ask

  4. Synonyms: (overwhelmed): in over one's head. When faced with a challenging task or situation, it’s common to feel overwhelmed and lost in the details. This feeling is often described as being “in the weeds.”. While this phrase may seem straightforward, its origins and usage are more complex than one might expect.

    • Origin
    • In The Weeds Synonyms and Substitutions
    • Let’s Review

    Since the exact origin of the phrase cannot be attributed to any one group or publication, it is widely accepted that it came into use during the European colonization of Caribbean islands who also brought with them the slave trade. The cultivation of rice and sugar required many hands to rid the area of weeds for planting, and it is possible the t...

    The most accepted synonym is to be experiencing difficulties. But idiomatic variances such as in a pickle, in a sticky situation, lost in a jungle, up a creek, on a slippery slope, or on rocky ground all suggest the same and may be influenced by the term in the weeds. In the weeds,also occasionally may be used with word additions to create a more d...

    In the weeds is a well-known term that has given rise to many variations, all of which suggest the same thing: being stuck or frustrated in a situation that is hard to get out of. It also can be used to describe a person wasting their time with too much detail in their attempts to solve this situation.

    • English Teacher
  5. Totally immersed or preoccupied with the details or complexities (of something). I'd like to come out tonight, but I'm deep into the weeds with my thesis. When I left them at the library, they were getting into the weeds analyzing Mrs. Dalloway for their presentation. I think you're too deep into the weeds to see a solution.

  6. May 21, 2013 · 993 subscribers. Subscribed. 2.4K. 293K views 10 years ago. Music video by Bob James & David Sanborn performing Deep in the Weeds. (C) 2013 David Sanborn and Tappan Zee Records, Inc....

    • May 21, 2013
    • 301.6K
    • davidsanbornVEVO
  1. People also search for