shoot through like a Bondi tram

English

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Verb

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shoot through like a Bondi tram (third-person singular simple present shoots through like a Bondi tram, present participle shooting through like a Bondi tram, simple past and past participle shot through like a Bondi tram)

  1. (simile, Australia, colloquial, informal) To leave in haste.
    • 1945 April, John Scarlett, censored dispatch quoted in 2011, Fay Anderson, Richard Trembath, Witnesses to War: The History of Australian Conflict Reporting, Melbourne University Press, page 197,
      [] then he gets back into his jeep says good luck boys and shoots through like a Bondi tram.
    • 1994, Lydia Laube, The Long Way Home: Nobody Goes that Way, published 2002, page 22:
      When it came to the real thing, panic took over and the routine shot through like a Bondi tram, to be replaced by a three-ring circus.
    • 2006, Pip Wilson, Faces in the Street: Louisa and Henry Lawson and the Castlereagh Street Push, page 431:
      She had put the wind up them, called them “un-Australian”, and took to them with her parasol and they shot through like a Bondi tram, one of the men with a gash on his neck that he won′t quickly forget.