We have no meanings for "hit the buffers" in our records yet.
1 The promise of the "easiest trade deal in history" soon hit the buffers .
2 The Co-op's Dick Parkhouse said: The traditional banking model seems to have hit the buffers .
3 If elite golf is due to hit the buffers , they are not yet in view.
4 When Keynesian demand management hit the buffers in the 70s, there was an alternative ready.
5 Crystal Palace, by stark contrast, have hit the buffers with three defeats in a row.
6 Photograph: Michael Duff Against this background, Johnson and his team hit the buffers again and again.
7 Openshaw's study hit the buffers from the start.
8 Eventually they were sending me around the world, to peace talks that had hit the buffers .
9 Saracens proffered an Anglo-South African club contest as an alternative had European top-flight rugby hit the buffers .
10 Europeans are generally delighted that George Bush's neocon project has finally hit the buffers in the US mid-term elections.
11 Progress, we think, is about to hit the buffers of overpopulation, the greenhouse effect, and the exhaustion of resources.
12 Huddersfield have hit the buffers .
13 When the limited budget hit the buffers it was clear the system could not continue to operate in this way.
14 Virgin need look no further than its own railway contracts to know how easily this private model can hit the buffers .
15 Top European commercial and central bankers are divided over how to regulate major financial institutions, especially when they hit the buffers .
16 Dail Sketch Frank McNallyThe roll-out of electronic voting may have momentarily hit the buffers , but the controversy rumbled merrily on yesterday.
Other examples for "hit the buffers"
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This collocation consists of: Hit the buffers through the time
Hit the buffers across language varieties