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Difference between Let someone stew and Let someone stew in one’s own juice

let someone stew—(also: leave someone stew) keep a person in a state of uneasy anticipation or suspense:

  • For one delicious week I let him stew while he begged and pleaded for his career, his marriage, his reputation.

let someone stew in one’s own juice —(also: leave someone stew in one’s own juice) leave a person to his own devices to suffer the consequences of his own actions:

  • Some were saying “well he asked for it, now let him stew in his own juice.”

Note: The expression does not correlate in meaning with the phrase juice someone up—(sl.) stimulate or invigorate a person:

  • He’s a former U.S. Navy pilot who was given pills to juice him up for long flights.