Dictionary.com
Thesaurus.com
Showing results for have it. Search instead for leave it'.

have it

Idioms  
  1. Receive or learn something, as in I have it on the best authority that he's running again . [Late 1600s]

  2. Possess a solution, understand, as in Is this the new phone number? Do I have it straight? or I think I have it now . [Mid-1800s]

  3. Take it, as in There's some ice cream left; go ahead and have it . This usage is always put as an imperative. [Second half of 1300s]

  4. Have the victory, win, as in We've counted the votes and the nays have it . The related expressions have it over someone or have it all over someone mean “to be superior to someone.” For example, Jane has it all over Mary when it comes to reading aloud . [Early 1900s]

  5. let someone have it . Give a beating, scolding, or punishment. For example, When she gets home Dad will let her have it . [Mid-1800s]

  6. have it off . Have sexual intercourse, as in The two dogs were having it off in the backyard . [ Colloquial ; early 1900s] Also see the subsequent idioms beginning with have it ; not have it .


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.

Related: Did baby boomers really have it easier than millennials?

From MarketWatch

This’ll probably be one of the last times we’ll have it for months— we’ve almost run out of the tomatoes we canned from last summer.

From Literature

But finally, after about ten drafts, I think I finally have it.

From Literature

“What else am I supposed to do? I want to stay here, and this is the best plan I have. It’s the only plan I have.”

From Literature

I’m not thrilled to have it in our room, and if I’d known you could just borrow a computer for free like that, I probably wouldn’t have agreed to go to school at all.

From Literature