List em. "Punching above your weight" - when an ugly dude has a good looking woman, when an average dude does well etc etc.
More of a boxing-negotiation term than boxing per se, but personally, whenever I blew out or dumped a woman, my excuse was 'she didn't bring much to the table' or 'she couldn't go the full 12 rounds'
"land a telling blow".............. i.e. a decisive comment in a debate or exchange. "ducking and weaving"- using evasive measures or language. "haymaker"- see "telling blow"-
Roll with the punches body blow On the ropes counterpunch ropeadope is 'playing posom' a boxing term?
Thought I'd edited this to give an explanation. In the bare-knuckle era they didn't have ten counts, instead a line was drawn in the centre of the ring, which was called the 'scratch'. If a fighter went down he had to reach this line before a certain period of time or else he would lose the bout, hence not being "up to scratch".
I think most of the ones posted originated from boxing. Playing possum did not, and it's not even used that commonly.
"60/40" Always hear this term in business and in life, and everytime I'm soooo tempted to chime in with... "And I'll kick yo ass!"
Ffs..... Yes, but it must've been invented by someone, somewhere to describe human behaviour which was analogous to the behaviour of a posom. I'm positing it might've been by boxing commentators/trainers. It'd be my first guess
Nope. I just looked it up. The phrase was originally used in the mid 1800s by the Washington Globe commenting on a politcal campaign.