Idiom
Off the hook.
No longer have to deal with a tough situation.
Exact(2)
"I'm going off the hook with this thing".
"My phone's been going off the hook with people inquiring about our organization.
Similar(57)
"Libya is not going to get off the hook," said Kathleen Flynn, whose son John Patrick Flynn, a junior at Colgate University returning home from a study abroad program, was killed in the attack.
If past Disrupts are any indication, Disrupt is going to be off the hook, and you are going to want to be there.
Del Potro gave his fellow players a road map to beating Federer, and pace to the backhand is on Page 1. Federer will try to get off the hook by going up the line to Tsonga's forehand, which, like a lot of powerful forehands, is less effective from the forehand corner than from the middle of the court.
And they're not going to be able to get off the hook.
After sensing that the line "I don't understand" wasn't going to get her off the hook, she finally blurted: "No.
Bilal had said the words during a run-of-the-mill domestic row, so this definitely wasn't going to get him off the hook.
His new PR campaign is going to be "off the hook".
Go back to his January election as chairman of the Republican National Committee, when Steele said he was committed to bringing "this party to every corner, to every boardroom, to every neighborhood, to every community;" when he said his public relations campaign was going to be "off the hook;" and when he said his party was about to undergo an extreme makeover.
Messi was waiting, unmarked, and was never going to let Chelsea off the hook.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com