ballpark Ballpark,
in the ballpark,
ballpark figure, and
out of the ballpark — "Ballpark" has been used to mean a broad area of approximation or similarity, or a range within which comparison is possible; this usage the
Oxford English Dictionary dates to 1960. Another meaning, "sphere of activity or influence", is cited in 1963. "In the (right) ballpark", meaning "within reasonable bounds" dates to 1968. A "ballpark figure" or "ballpark estimate", one that is reasonably accurate, dates to at least 1957. The meaning of "out of the ball park" is to hit a
home run; its non-baseball equivalent is to do something well or exactly as it should be done. "'They said Itanium would never be their fastest 32-bit processor, but it would be
in the ballpark. The original x86 hardware execution mechanism was not
in the ballpark. It was barely in the parking lot around the ballpark,' Brookwood said.' – Nathan Brookwood, quoted by Stephen Shankland
, CNET, 23 April 2003. "Patrick Wiles, a vice president of First Pioneer Farm Credit in Riverhead, said the '
ballpark figure' for prime vineyard land on the North Fork is $50,000 to $60,000 an acre, 'assuming the development rights have been sold.'" – Howard G. Goldberg,
The New York Times, 18 July 2004. MSNBC said Hillary knocked it "
out of the park". – Randy Stelly and Carol Forsloff,
New America Media, 27 August 2008.
batting 1000 Also
batting a thousand. Getting everything in a series of items right. In baseball, someone with a
batting average of one thousand (written as 1.000) has had a
hit for every
at bat in the relevant time period (e.g., in a
game).
AHDI dates its non-baseball usage to the 1920s. May also be used sarcastically when someone is getting everything wrong. "'But
Boston Scientific also needs to hope that a rare event does not become magnified,' he said. 'It has to be pretty much
batting a thousand for a time,' he said". — Reed Abelson,
The New York Times, 27 July 2004.
beanball, or throw a beanball To attack an opponent by aiming at their head. In baseball, a
beanball is a pitch intentionally thrown at a batter's head. In politics, it can be a verbal assault or a policy that is targeted to seriously hurt a particular opponent or group. headline: "Senator
Jim Bunning Throws
Beanball at America's Unemployed" – Mason Lerner,
The Faster Times, 26 February 2010. :::[Note: Then-Sen. Bunning had an established career as a Major League Baseball pitcher prior to running for public office.] "But
Brown and
Whitman didn't swing at the questions, instead choosing to stick to a game of political
beanball — trading jabs on Whitman's housekeeper, a Brown aide's "whore" remark and even verbal miscues. – Steven Luo,
California Beat, 13 October 2010.
big hitter(s) At the highest level; used as a noun ("He is a big hitter").
big league(s) At the highest level; used as a noun ("You're in the big leagues now") or an adjective ("big-league lawyer").
OED cites "big league" as specifically American
Major League Baseball, and cites its first use in 1899; the non-baseball use appears in 1947. Synonym:
major league. Contrast
bush league, below. "For a listener who last heard the
New Haven Symphony in the mid-60's, in a game but scrappy performance of
Britten's
War Requiem, its concert on Friday evening was a happy surprise. Under its music director,
Michael Palmer, it sounded for the most part like a
big-league band, at home in a
big-league setting". — James Oestreich,
The New York Times, 25 January 1994.
brand new ballgame In baseball, when a team that has been behind in runs ties up the game, it is sometimes said to be a brand new ballgame. This does not mean that the game starts over from the first inning; it only means that neither team is ahead, and the game continues. In other realms, the term is used to connote a change in tactics or who is ahead in a competition. "It's a
Brand New Ballgame for Outsourcing Real Estate" — John C. Maher,
National Real Estate Investor, 1 July 2005. "
Brand new ball game: New peanut program brings change" — Paul L. Hollis,
Southwest Farm Press, 21 March 2002.
brush back To subvert or threaten verbally. In baseball, a
brushback pitch is any pitch intended to establish a pitcher's command of the inside portion of the strike zone, usually involving throwing a pitch at or near a hitter who may be covering that portion of the strike zone. Its baseball usage is cited in many dictionaries, but its transition to the vernacular has yet to be dated. ''"
The Washington Times'
George Archibald reports that Gerald A. Reynolds, assistant secretary for civil rights in the Department of Education, has sent a long overdue brush-back letter to college and university officials concerning their odious and oppressive campus speech codes". — David Limbaugh,The Washington Times,'' August 19, 2003. "One spokeswoman,
Andrea Saul, has been throwing
brushback pitches at reporters who write about
Romney's faith, asking if they would write similar stories about Jews". – Jeffrey Goldberg,
Bloomberg News, June 18, 2012.
bush league Amateur, unsophisticated, unprofessional. From the baseball term "
bush league" for a second-rate baseball league and therefore its players (as in
bush-league pitcher etc.).
OED cites its first baseball use as 1906 (although there are uses as early as 1896), non-baseball in 1914. Contrast
big league, above. "
Kinsley, who does come off as the stereotypical Los Angeles-hating East Coast wonk, said recently that because L.A. is the second biggest city in the country, 'it's really
bush league to care about where the writers are from.'"—
Catherine Seipp,
National Review, March 24, 2005. ==C==