Alternative idiom to "phone it in"


I like to use the idiom 'phone it in' in the sense described by Wiktionary:



To fulfill a responsibility with a minimum effort rather than the appropriate level of effort.



For example: 'He used to try his best at this task but at the moment he's really phoning it in.'


However, friends and colleagues do not seem to recognize the idiom. Is there an equivalent idiom that might be more likely to be understood?



Answer



He's really just going through the motions.


From the [Free Dictionary]:



go through the motions


Fig. to make a feeble effort to do something; to do something insincerely or in cursory fashion. Jane isn't doing her best. She's just going through the motions. Bill was supposed to be raking the yard, but he was just going through the motions.


McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.


go through the motions


Do something perfunctorily, or merely pretend to do it. For example, The team is so far behind that they're just going through the motions, or She didn't really grieve at his death; she just went through the motions. [c. 1800]


The American Heritage® Dictionary of Idioms by Christine Ammer.


go through the motions


To do something in a mechanical manner indicative of a lack of interest or involvement.


American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition.



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