English

edit

Alternative forms

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Adverb

edit

full tilt boogie (not comparable)

  1. (idiomatic) At the most extreme level; at full capacity.
    • 2004, Bruce Hale, The Malted Falcon, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, page 55:
      So we ran, full tilt boogie. Behind us, the footsteps echoed. ¶ Natalie and I shot around the corner. Before our pursuers appeared, I pointed up. Natalie flapped to the roof. I scrambled after her.
    • 2006, Mike Zimmerman, Men's Health; Succeed Like This Joker, Rodale, Inc., page 166:
      I told myself, I'm going to die reaching these goals. I had to go full-tilt boogie, or I'd suck.

Translations

edit

Noun

edit

full tilt boogie (uncountable)

  1. (slang, idiomatic) An extreme level.
    • 1990, Tony Swan, Popular Mechanics; Freewheeling, Hearst Magazines, page 30:
      Full capacity is the zinger, of course. When production hits full-tilt boogie sometime this year, the annualized rate will be about 40,000 units.
    • 2007, Alafair Burke, Dead Connection, Macmillan, page 203:
      Within a year of his release, he'd OD'd on the full-tilt boogie.

Usage notes

edit
  • Even though the phrase can stand alone, it is common to see the words at and in, forms of the verb go, and the phrase on the.

Synonyms

edit

Translations

edit
edit

References

edit