Noun
He has people working for him, but he has a tight rein on every part of the process.
after the president resigned, the vice president stepped in and took the reins of the company Verb
try to rein in your spending, so you have some money left for saving
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Noun
The eight-part series will see Jowsey hand the reins of his love life to those who know him best.—Peter White, Deadline, 17 July 2025 After drafting him No. 2 overall, the Washington Commanders wasted no time handing the reins over to Daniels.—Kevin McCormick, MSNBC Newsweek, 15 July 2025
Verb
But no one has pieced together the full account of what the drugmaker Celgene did, how federal regulators failed to rein it in and what the story reveals about unrestrained drug pricing in America.—David Armstrong, CNN Money, 10 May 2025 Many of those groups have not been brought under the control of new national military, and Syria’s authorities have shown little capacity to rein them in.—Ephrat Livni, New York Times, 2 May 2025 See All Example Sentences for rein
Word History
Etymology
Noun
Middle English reine, from Anglo-French resne, reine, from Vulgar Latin *retina, from Latin retinēre to restrain — more at retain
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