in the red

Etymology
From the standard accounting practice of using red ink to denote negative values, especially a net loss. The first known written use of the phrase is from the "Wise-crack dictionary" (1926) by George H. Maines and Bruce Grant.

Prepositional phrase

 * 1)  Having net losses; in debt.

Translations

 * Finnish: miinuksen puolella
 * French: dans le rouge
 * German: in den roten Zahlen, in den Roten
 * Italian:
 * Japanese:
 * Korean:
 * Portuguese: no vermelho
 * Russian: в долга́х
 * Spanish: en números rojos
 * Thai: ติดหนี้, เป็นหนี้
 * Vietnamese: