take liberties with someone or something
- take liberties with someone or something
take liberties with someone or something & make free with someone or something
to freely use or abuse someone or something. •
You are overly familiar with me, Mr. Jones. One might think you were taking liberties with me.
•
I don't like it when you make free with my lawn mower. You should at least ask when you want to borrow it.
Dictionary of American idioms.
2013.
Look at other dictionaries:
take liberties — 1. to change something, especially a piece of writing, in a way that people disagree with. Whoever wrote the screenplay for the film took great liberties with the original text of the novel. (usually + with) 2. to be too friendly to someone in a… … New idioms dictionary
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Civil liberties in the United Kingdom — have a long and formative history. This is usually considered to have begun with the English legal charter the Magna Carta of 1215, following its predecessor the English Charter of Liberties, a landmark document in English legal history. Judicial … Wikipedia
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liberty — [[t]lɪ̱bə(r)ti[/t]] ♦♦♦ liberties 1) N VAR Liberty is the freedom to live your life in the way that you want, without interference from other people or the authorities. → See also civil liberties ...the ideal of equality and the appreciation of… … English dictionary
liberty — lib|er|ty [ lıbərti ] noun ** 1. ) uncount the freedom to think or behave in the way you want and not be controlled by a government or by other people: their long struggle for liberty and independence a ) count a particular kind of freedom,… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English