[used to be] or [did use to be] {v. phr.} Formerly or once was. •/Mary used to be small; but she has grown up./ •/Dick used to be the best pitcher on the team last year; now two other pitchers are better than he is./
[use every trick in the book]{v. phr.}, {informal} To avail oneself of any means at all in order to achieve one’s goal, not exclusive of possibly immoral or illegal acts. •/Algernon used every trick in the book to get Maxine to go out with him, but she kept refusing./
[use one’s head] or {slang} [use one’s bean] or {slang} [use one’s noodle] or {slang} use [one’s noggin] {v. phr.} To use your brain or mind; think; have common sense. — Often used as a command. •/If you used your bean you wouldn’t be in trouble now./ •/Never point a gun at anybody, John. Use your head!/
[use up]{v. phr.} 1. To use until nothing is left; spend or consume completely. •/Don’t use up all the soap. Leave me some to wash with./ •/Jack used up his last dollar to see the movies./ Compare: GIVE OUT(5). 2. {informal} To tire completely; make very tired; exhaust; leave no strength or force in. — Usually used in the passive. •/After rowing the boat across the lake, Robert was used up./ Compare: GIVE OUT(4), WEAR OUT.
[utility room]{n.} A room in a house or building for machinery and other things important in the daily use of the building and the work of the people in it. •/There is a utility room upstairs where Mother does the laundry./ •/The oil burner is kept in the utility room in the basement./
V
[vain] See: IN VAIN, TAKE ONE’S NAME IN VAIN.
[valor] See: DISCRETION IS THE BETTER PART OF VALOR.
[value] See: FACE VALUE.
[vanish into thin air] See: DISAPPEAR INTO THIN AIR.
[vanishing cream]{n.} A cosmetic cream for the skin that is used chiefly before face powder. •/Mrs. Jones spread vanishing cream on her face before applying her face powder./
[vanity case]{n.} 1. A small case containing face powder, lipstick, and other things and usually carried in a woman’s handbag; a compact. •/She took out her vanity case and put lipstick on./ 2. A handbag or a small bag carried by a woman and holding various toilet articles. •/She had the porter carry her big bags and she herself carried her vanity case./
[variety show]{n.} A program that includes several different kinds of entertainment (as songs, dances, comic skits and little dramas). •/Jane’s father was the master of ceremonies of a variety show on TV./
[variety store]{n.} A store that sells many different kinds of things, especially items that are fairly small and in everyday use. •/I went into a variety store and bought some paint./ •/Five-and-ten cent stores are a kind of variety store./
[vein] See: FREEZE ONE’S BLOOD or FREEZE THE BLOOD IN ONE’S VEINS, FREEZE ONE’S VEINS.
[verbal diarrhea]{n. phr.} The inability to keep silent; over-talkativeness. •/Archibald is a nice guy but he’s got verbal diarrhea and he can’t shut up for a single minute./
[very] See: ALL VERY WELL.
[very well]{interj.}, {formal} Agreed; all right. — Used to show agreement or approval. •/Very well. You may go./ •/Very well, I will do as you say./ Compare: ALL RIGHT(2).
[vibrations] or [vibes] {n.} Psychic emanations radiating from an object, situation, or person. •/I don’t think this relationship will work out — this guy has given me bad vibes./
[vicious circle]{n. phr.} A kind of circular or chain reaction in which one negative thing leads to another. •/Some people take so many different kinds of medicine to cure an illness that they develop other illnesses from the medicine and are thus caught in a vicious circle./
[Vietnam syndrome]{n.}, {informal} An attitude in government circles that diplomacy may be more effective in solving local political problems in other countries than the use of military force, stemming from the failure of the U.S. military intervention in Vietnam. •/The pundits of Foggy Bottom display the Vietnam syndrome these days when it comes to Iran./
[view] See: IN VIEW, IN VIEW OF, TAKE A DIM VIEW OF.
[vine] See: DIE ON THE VINE or WITHER ON THE VINE, CLINGING VINE.
[virtue] See: BY VIRTUE OF, MAKE A VIRTUE OF NECESSITY.
[visiting nurse]{n.} A nurse who goes from home to home taking care of sick people or giving help with other health problems. •/After John returned home from the hospital, the visiting nurse came each day to change his bandages./
[voice] See: AT THE TOP OF ONE’S VOICE, GIVE VOICE.
[voice box]{n.} The part of the throat where the sound of your voice is made; the larynx. •/Mr. Smith’s voice box was taken out in an operation, and he could not talk after that./
[voiceprint]{n.}, {technological}, {colloquial} The graphic pattern derived from converting an individual’s voice into a visible graph used by the police for identification purposes, much as fingerprints. •/They have succeeded in identifying the murderer by using a voiceprint./
[volcano] See: SIT ON A VOLCANO.
[volume] See: SPEAK VOLUMES.
[vote a straight ticket]{v. phr.} To not differentiate one’s ballot according to individual names and posts, but to vote for all candidates for all positions of the same party. •/"I never have time.to study the ballot in detail," Marie said, "and so I tend to vote a straight Republican ticket."/
[vote in]{v. phr.} To elevate to the status of "Law of the Land" by special or general ballot. •/Congress has finally voted in the Brady Law that requires that prospective gun owners wait a special period of time before making their purchase./
[vote one out]{v. phr.} To terminate one’s elected office by casting a negative vote about that person (judge, congressman, etc.), mostly so that someone else might occupy the same position. •/Congressman Smith was voted out last November in favor of Congresswoman Bradley./