Idiom
On the case.
If someone is on the case, they are dealing with a problem.
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Exact(24)
Mr. Schwartz said he had received about 20 harassing phone calls since taking on the case two years ago.
Mr. Chen has been a target of the government since taking on the case of thousands of women who were victims of forced sterilizations and abortions.
Federal prosecutors are considering taking on the case as a possible civil-rights violation, and the family have a civil claim against the government for excessive use of force by law-enforcement officials.
Ben Beaumont's central gist, writing for the Guardian, is this: "In taking on the case, Swift has made a truly universal political statement" – the logic following that, in being groped and then going through an arduous court case, she has experienced some kind of awakening.
Merely by taking on the case, the justices have backed one part of the detainees' brief that "it is for the courts, not the executive, to determine whether executive action is subject to judicial review".
Taking on the case was a mix of principle and pragmatism.
Similar(36)
Mr. Neuborne took on the Holocaust case in her memory.
The contradiction between the two rulings prompted the Supreme Court to take on the Fourniers' case.
(Mr Burgaud was 29 when he took on the Outreau case).
Lawyers will be less inclined to take on the toughest cases.
"He would take on the most complex cases".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com