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help oneself
Serve oneself, as in The food's in the kitchen; just help yourself . When it takes an object this phrase is put as help oneself to , as in I helped myself to more meat . It also is used as a euphemism for stealing, as in She simply helped herself to the hotel towels and left . The first usage dates from the late 1600s; the second, a colloquialism, from the mid-1800s.
Make an effort on one's own behalf. Shakespeare used this expression in 2 Henry IV (3:2): 鈥淪he is old, and cannot help herself,鈥 and it also appears in the old proverb, God (or heaven ) helps those who help themselves . [First half of 1500s] Also see can't help .
Example Sentences
When the Bundy-types refuse to pay for grazing they are bilking their fellow citizens - it's no different than mooching in to the General Store and helping oneself.
鈥淛ust as much as聽we believe in the social safety net, we also believe it鈥檚 a sin not to help oneself.鈥
The food, Mr. Bruce said, couldn鈥檛 be overly fancy or ornate, or it would be too difficult to help oneself.
A few minutes later, he was replaced by a group of men having an intense discussion about the Congolese mineral trade 鈥 鈥渟elf-help,鈥 perhaps meaning helping oneself to that country鈥檚 riches.
"It's a nonsensical idea," he told an audience at the London Film Festival, likening the notion to helping oneself to "free shirts" in a clothing store.
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