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get away with
Escape the consequences or blame for, as in Bill often cheats on exams but usually gets away with it . [Late 1800s]
get away with murder . Escape the consequences of killing someone; also, do anything one wishes. For example, If the jury doesn't convict him, he'll have gotten away with murder , or He talks all day on the phone—the supervisor is letting him get away with murder . [First half of 1900s]
Example Sentences
"We know it would be ideal to train on all the tasks, but we wondered if we could get away with training on a subset of those tasks, apply the result to all the tasks, and still see a performance increase," Wu says.
In May 2020, Trump took to Twitter to ask, “When will they open a Cold Case on the Psycho Joe Scarborough matter in Florida? Did he get away with murder? Some people think so,” Trump wrote.
“Some women have allowed them to get away with bad behavior, and I don’t believe I’m supposed to put up with that,” she said.
Davis became the first Black woman to win an Emmy for lead actress in a drama series in 2015 for her work in “How to Get Away with Murder.”
The ability to commit crimes — even sex crimes — and get away with it is part of the allure of Trumpism.
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