Physics, asked by ashwanikumar6983, 1 year ago

To come out from a boat we need to push it

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Answered by Anonymous
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To push the boat out means primarily to spend heavily, usually on pleasure, eating, drinking,etc, and often in the context of treating others. The first example I have found is this

1916 T. Burke Limehouse Nights 214: Going to push the boat out for me? [...] Mine’s a claret and soda.


In extended, non-consuming uses it can also mean to do something to excess or, verbally, to exaggerate.

The origin is apparently in Royal Navy slang, where it simply meant to buy a round of drinks. The boat that was pushed out was presumably that which contained a group of sailors embarking on a night's drinking.
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