rope into

English

Verb

rope into (third-person singular simple present ropes into, present participle roping into, simple past and past participle roped into)

  1. Used other than with a figurative or idiomatic meaning: see rope, into.
    • 2010, Kurt Lewis Allen, The Service, →ISBN, page 202:
      They could be quickly strapped into the jump-seats with seatbelts, rather than roping them into the bed of the truck in a downpour.
  2. To inveigle someone into (doing something) that they are reluctant to do.
    • 1982, Charles F. Sabel, Work and Politics: The Division of Labour in Industry, →ISBN, page 157:
      Efforts to contain the discontent in the plants through the creation of new bargaining institutions gave the unions an apprenticeship in institution building without roping them into a defense of the status quo;
    • 2012, Susan Hill, Simon Serrailler Bundle: The Pure in Heart/The Various Haunts of Men, →ISBN:
      She's roped me into making six chocolate truffle tortes for a hospice do and to help with the spring fair.
    • 2016, Alpha Dominion, Shattered Dreams, →ISBN:
      He wondered if it was a case of deliberate set up, to rope him into something bigger than him.

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