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WATER, BLOW(N) (SOMEONE OR SOMETHING) OUT OF THE

WATER, BLOW(N) (SOMEONE OR SOMETHING) OUT OF THE
ScnTUEU
a phrase used figuratively to mean to conclusively or decisively defeat; also, to overcome, etc. This phrase originated in the mid-1800s in naval warfare where it meant to shoot or blast a ship entirely to pieces, as with one's cannons, and thus out of the water. It began to be applied to defeats in sports and other activities around the mid-twentieth century.