Stick to one’s guns

Origin of: Stick to one’s guns

Stick to one’s guns

A metaphor for adhering to one’s beliefs or convictions and not wavering, dates in this sense from the mid-19th century but long before this it was obviously a military credo in that soldiers and sailors should continue to ply their guns until the battle is won. In this original, military sense stick to one’s guns was more likely to be American, while the British equivalent would have been stand to your guns.