on the lam

English

Etymology

From lam (flight, escape).

Pronunciation

  • Audio (General Australian):(file)

Adjective

on the lam (not comparable)

  1. Running away, usually from the police; on the run.
    • 2004, Nintendo EAD, Pikmin 2, Nintendo, space e-mail:
      The President: 'Hello... I am still on the lam from debt collectors.'
    • 2007, Howie Carr, The Brothers Bulger[1]:
      Their top hitman, Joe Russo, was on the lam after murdering Joe Barboza in San Francisco.
    • 2012 September 15, “Vietnam: A Tiger at Bay”, in The Economist:
      There have been more bank runs, executives on the lam, arrests and credit panics than the country has seen in years.
    • 2024 November 25, Fred Weir, “In shifting world, post-Soviet states look back to a constant: Russia”, in The Christian Science Monitor:
      Charges of Russian meddling, including allegations of vote-buying by a Moldovan oligarch on the lam in Russia, could have substance.

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