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Showing results for bury the hatchet. Search instead for Bury+The+Hatchet.
Synonyms

bury the hatchet

Cultural  
  1. To agree to end a quarrel: “Jerry and Cindy had been avoiding each other since the divorce, but I saw them together this morning, so they must have buried the hatchet.”


bury the hatchet Idioms  
  1. Make peace; settle one's differences. For example, Toward the end of the year, the roommates finally decided to bury the hatchet. Although some believe this term comes from a Native American custom for declaring peace between warring tribes, others say it comes from hang up one's hatchet, a term dating from the early 1300s (well before Columbus landed in the New World). The word bury replaced hang up in the 1700s.


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

The hosts of MSNBC’s Morning Joe also made the trip to bury the hatchet with the president-elect.

From Slate • Dec. 16, 2024

The article pointed out that Bourdain had made “similarly categorical denunciations of many people, only to bury the hatchet and join them for dinner.”

From Los Angeles Times • Nov. 30, 2023

Mr. Kilmeade pressed the issue, saying she needed to bury the hatchet with Mr. Trump.

From New York Times • Nov. 30, 2023

Mr Thaksin and the conservatives both saw a threat from the same quarter, and decided to bury the hatchet to confront it.

From BBC • Aug. 23, 2023

After all, they were my friends, and it was time to bury the hatchet.

From "Schooled" by Gordon Korman

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