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Idiom: Break A Leg

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breakaleg

Meanings

Unknown; many unproven and widely debated theories exist. One of the most plausible is that it comes from Yiddish הצלחה און ברכה‎ (hatslokhe un brokhe, “success and blessing”) through the heavy Ashkenazi Jewish influence in the American theater, via the misinterpretation in German as Hals- und Beinbruch (“neck and leg fracture”). The Yiddish phrase itself comes from Hebrew הַצְלָחָה וּבְרָכָה‎ (hatzlakhá u-v'rakhá, “success and blessing”). Another possible origin was to wish opposite luck on the performer so as not to jinx the statement.

How to pronounce "break a leg":

AU

Said to someone wishing they perform well in a theatrical production or comparable endeavor.

Example: "Go out there and break a leg tonight. Put on a great show!"

Example: "I told my friend to break a leg, before she went on stage."

Example Sentences

1
I hope you break a leg in the race this weekend!
2
She's about to go on stage, so I told her to break a leg.
3
He told the comedian to break a leg before going on stage.
4
Wishing you all the best, break a leg at the competition tonight!
5
The director wished the actors to break a leg before the play started.

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