hands-up, verb
- Origin:
- See hensop.
a. intransitive. To surrender; figurative, to give up an unequal struggle. Cf. hensop.
1901 ‘Linesman’ Words by Eyewitness 239The refugee camps within the British lines wherein dwell the hundreds of Dutchmen who have surrendered or ‘hands-upped’.
1978 A.P. Brink Rumours of Rain 324‘Ja, the old useless,’ commented Ma..‘And Gert too. The whole lot of them hands-upping just like that.’
b. transitive. To cause or force (someone) to surrender.
1936 H.F. Trew Botha Treks 170The man rode gaily along..and so puffed into Grootfontein. To his alarm and astonishment he was promptly ‘hands-upped’ by a German picket.
a1951 H.C. Bosman in L. Abrahams Unto Dust (1963) 160My Mauser is very rusty. I’ll have to hands-up or shoot one of the enemy and take his Lee-Metford off him.
To surrender; figurative, to give up an unequal struggle.
To cause or force (someone) to surrender.
- Derivatives:
- Hence hands up adjective; handup noun, hands-upper sense 1 a; hands-upping verbal noun, surrendering.1901 E. Hobhouse Report of Visit to Camps 3There are nearly 2,000 people in this one camp, of which some few are men — they call them ‘hands up’ men and over 900 children.1975 W. Steenkamp Land of Thirst King 78Stories..tell vividly of the cold ferocity with which the men of the three races struggled for the possession of Namaqualand. Hands-upping was a luxury they did not believe in much: You fought, and you won or died.