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Gurgen Posted 14 years ago
Vocabulary

She'd go all D.A. on me.

-Everything cool? -Yeah, just calling a friendabout homework. -A friend at school's just going through some stuff. -I may not be a detective yet, but I was a teenager. -Promise you won't tell Mom? She'd go all D.A. on me.


I don't understand taht sentence:
She'd go all D.A. on me.

2. example:
I'm not saying I want you to go
all Sweet Valley High on me.


  

Top answer

Every country has its own system of laws. Here in the United States of America, it is the job of someone called a " d istrict a ttorney" to decide whether a person should be charged with a crime. For example, let's say that the police say that Mr.

  • Every country has its own system of laws.
  • Here in the United States of America, it is the job of someone called a " d istrict a ttorney" to decide whether a person should be charged with a crime.
  • For example, let's say that the police say that Mr.
  • X did something bad.
  • A.
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3 Answers
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Every country has its own system of laws.

Here in the United States of America, it is the job of someone called a "district attorney" to decide whether a person

should be charged with a crime. For example, let's say that the police say that Mr. X did something bad. The D.A. then

decides whether or not Mr. X must go on trial. Before s/he makes this decis
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The grammatical pattern is

to go all X on Y.

(X is a proper noun amazingly often, but it need not be. Y is a person. See examples below.)

The meaning is -- to act like (an) X (or like people associated with X) toward person Y.

It's very informal usage.

If you don't know what X is - and it's usually a term from popular culture - you'll ha
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thanks... both of you...

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