Heel, Heels.

(Anglo-Saxon hēl.)

Achillesʹ heel. (See under Achilles.)

I showed him a fair pair of heels. I ran away and outran them.

Two of them saw me when I went out of doors, and chased me, but I showed them a fair pair of heels.”—Sir W. Scott: Peveril of the Peak, chap. xxiv.

Out at heels. In a sad plight, in decayed circumstances, like a beggar whose stockings are worn out at the heels.


“A good man’s fortune may grow out at heels.”


To show a light pair of heels. To abscond.

To take to one’s heels. To run off. “In pedes nos conjicĕre.”

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Entry taken from Dictionary of Phrase and Fable, edited by the Rev. E. Cobham Brewer, LL.D. and revised in 1895.

Hector
Hector (A)
Hector (To)
Hectors
Hecuba
Hedge
Hedge Lane (London)
Hedge Priest
Hedge School (A)
Hedonism
Heel, Heels
Heel-tap
Heenan
Heep (Uriah)
Hegemony (g hard)
Hegira
Heimdall
Heimdall’s Horn
Heimdaller
Heims-kringla (The)
Heir - apparent