Another Word For HAD_IT

had had it

have seen this movie

Verb : (idiomatic) To have experienced a situation which is the same as or similar to the current situation, especially with a sense of the unpleasantness or tiresomeness of the recurring situation.

have had one's day

Verb : Alternative form of have seen one's day [(idiomatic, of persons, things, ideas, etc.) To be at the point in a life cycle or career of no longer being useful or effective; to be worn-out.]

have done

Verb : (intransitive) To reach an end.

been there

Verb : Used to say that one has experienced the same thing that someone else has experienced.

have

Verb : (transitive) To possess, own.

Verb : (transitive) To hold, as something at someone's disposal.

Verb : (transitive) To include as a part, ingredient, or feature.

have been around the block

Verb : Alternative form of have been around [(idiomatic) To be experienced in worldly matters; to be seasoned, not naive.]

have been around

Verb : (idiomatic) To be experienced in worldly matters; to be seasoned, not naive.

had like

Verb : (archaic) Had nearly; (did) not quite (followed by the infinitive).

had one's cake and ate it too

hadna

Verb : (nonstandard or dialectal) hadn't

done

Verb : (African-American Vernacular, Southern US, Cockney, auxiliary verb, taking a past tense) Used in forming the perfective aspect; have.

shoulda

Verb : (colloquial) Contraction of should have.

could of

Verb : Eye dialect spelling of could have or could've.

Verb : Misconstruction of could have or could've.

grinned and bore it

might've

Verb : Contraction of might have:

Verb : used to express the possibility of something occurring in the past as condition to another non-occurring past event

Verb : used to express uncertainty about a past event

hadn't

Verb : (informal) Contraction of had not. (negative auxiliary)

underwent

Verb : (transitive) To experience; to pass through a phase.

Verb : (transitive) To suffer or endure; bear with.

Verb : (transitive, obsolete) To go or move under or beneath.

got what was coming to one

could have sworn

Verb : (informal) Is very sure about; especially when the thing in question is apparently not the case or could be doubted.

would of

Verb : Eye dialect spelling of would have or would've.

Verb : Misconstruction of would have or would've.

hedn't

Verb : (nonstandard) Pronunciation spelling of hadn't, representing dialectal English.

got one's crap together

bit off more than one could chew

took something in stride

took on the chin

got one's panties in a pretzel

went through with

be no stranger to

Verb : To be familiar with due to past experience.

gots

Verb : (nonstandard) has, has got (3rd person singular)

Verb : (nonstandard, dialectal) have, have got (other forms)

used

Verb : (intransitive, auxiliary, defective, only in past tense/participle) To perform habitually; to be accustomed [to doing something].

should of

Verb : Eye dialect spelling of should have or should've.

Verb : Misconstruction of could have or could've.

could

Verb : conditional of can

Verb : Used as a past subjunctive (contrary to fact).

Verb : Used to politely ask for permission to do something.

took it upon oneself

went through

got over oneself

hannit

Verb : (UK, informal) Contraction of hasn't it.

could've

Verb : Contraction of could have.

got over with

déjà vu

Noun : The subjective, unexpected feeling of having experienced something before, especially when that is not the case.

Noun : Loosely or humorously, anything one has done before or is being repeated.

Verb : (colloquial, intransitive) To experience déjà vu; to see (something) as though having seen it before.

took it

hevn't

Verb : (nonstandard) Pronunciation spelling of haven't, representing dialectal English. [have not (negative form of have)]

used to

Adjective : (idiomatic, with noun phrase) Accustomed to, tolerant or accepting of.

Verb : (temporal location) Formerly and habitually or repeatedly, but possibly no longer, did.

threw up one's hands

got one's hands on

went to great lengths

took one's half out of the middle

took something as it came

had best

Verb : (modal, auxiliary verb) Had better.

got one's panties in a wad

bore with

did one's easement

could've sworn

Verb : Alternative form of could have sworn [(informal) Is very sure about; especially when the thing in question is apparently not the case or could be doubted.]

could have done with

went the whole hog

wore too many hats

did ill

blew one's cool

took one's medicine

took upon oneself

shouldna

Verb : (colloquial) Contraction of should not have.

Verb : Alternative form of shouldnae.

mighta

Verb : (colloquial) Pronunciation spelling of might've, might have. [Contraction of might have:]

fell on hard times

got one's panties in a bunch

reaped what one had sown

mistaked

Noun : (obsolete) A mistake.

went it

undercame

blew one's stack

been

Verb : (Southern US or African-American Vernacular) remote past form of be.

Verb : (Southern US or African-American Vernacular, rare) Synonym of be (infinitival sense).

came to terms with

got one's act together

hid one's light under a bushel

blew up in one's face

got one's hands dirty

went so far as

came to a sticky end

took for granted

overcame

Verb : (transitive) To surmount (a physical or abstract obstacle); to prevail over, to get the better of.

Verb : (intransitive) To prevail.

Verb : (transitive) To recover from (a difficulty), to get over

go back a long way

Verb : To have known each other for a long time.

live in the past

Verb : (idiomatic) To dwell on and ruminate about past events.

Verb : (idiomatic) To be steeped in outdated traditions, fashions, beliefs, etc.

underlied

Verb : Misconstruction of underlay [(transitive) To lay (something) underneath something else; to put under.]

Verb : Misconstruction of underlain

broke one's back

rode roughshod over

heered

Verb : (dialectal) heard; simple past and past participle of hear

ate it

went all the way

took matters into one's own hands

went to extraordinary lengths

came into one's own

got one's a into g

went to pains

threw one's weight around

got a rise out of

took on

overdid

Verb : To do too much; to exceed what is proper or true in doing; to carry too far.

Verb : To cook for too long.

Verb : To give (someone or something) too much work; to require too much effort or strength of (someone); to use up too much of (something).

came across with

fell ill

hasn't

Verb : Has not: negative form of the auxiliary has

Verb : (archaic, dialectal, literary) Has not/does not have: negative form of the lexical has

ran roughshod over

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