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lead-pipe cinch

[led-pahyp]

noun

Slang.
  1. an absolute certainty.

    It's a lead-pipe cinch they'll be there.

  2. something very easy to accomplish.

    Getting him elected will be a lead-pipe cinch.



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Word History and Origins

Origin of lead-pipe cinch1

An Americanism dating back to 1895–1900
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Idioms and Phrases

A certainty, an assured success. For example, “An engagement ain't always a lead-pipe cinch” (O. Henry, The Sphinx Apple, 1907). This colloquial expression is of disputed origin. It may allude to the cinch that tightly holds a horse's saddle in place, which can make it easier for the rider to succeed in a race; or it may allude to a cinch in plumbing, in which a lead pipe is fastened with a band of steel to another pipe or a fixture, making a very secure joint. [Late 1800s]

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