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  1. in a difficult situation, with no way of getting out of it: Customers feel they have been left up the creek without a paddle by the bank. If we don't address this problem now, we will be up a creek without a paddle in the very near future.

  2. In trouble, in a serious predicament, as in If the check doesn't arrive today I'm up a creek, or The car wouldn't start, so I was up the creek without a paddle. This slangy idiom conjures up the image of a stranded canoeist with no way of moving (paddling) the canoe.

  3. American origin. In an awkward situation or unpleasant predicament. What's the origin of the phrase 'Up shit creek without a paddle'? This slang phrase, like most street slang, is difficult to date and determine the origin of precisely.

  4. I'm happy to help. — I broke up with my boyfriend. Yesterday, I was up the creek and needed a ride to work and he told me to call an Uber instead of helping me. — You're always up a creek without a paddle. You'll have to ask someone else for help this time.

  5. Up shit creek without a paddle. In serious difficulty, with no hope of respite. We were halfway across the Australian outback when we realised our water bottle had leaked. We really were up shit creek.

  6. be up a/the creek (without a paddle) slang To be in a challenging or troublesome situation, especially one that cannot be easily resolved. I have no savings, so if I get fired from my job, I'll be up the creek without a paddle.

  7. Dec 11, 2022 · up the creek without a paddle. Alternative form of up the creek. Categories: English lemmas. English prepositional phrases.

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