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Wooh! Welcome back to Weekly Words, everybody. My name is Alisha, and this week we're going
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to talk about sports metaphors in business. This is gonna get real dude-like, real fast.
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First phrase, rather, is “jump the gun.” “Jump the gun” means you do something
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too quickly or you don't think enough about something before you do it. In a business
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setting, maybe a subordinate makes a decision before the bosses had a chance to decide on
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something. You might say, “Stevens, you jumped the gun again. We can't forgive you
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for this one. You're fired!”
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Okay, the next one is “drop the ball.” “Drop the ball” means you don't do something
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that you're supposed to do. Somebody was supposed to do something, and they didn't do it. They
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“dropped the ball.” Like in basketball, right? If you have a ball, you're supposed
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to pass the ball to a teammate. If you drop the ball, you let everybody down. “My co-worker
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really dropped the ball when he forgot to send that email. We were all
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disappointed.” Stevens, uh, okay.
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Next, “slam dunk.” A “slam dunk” is something that you are sure is going to happen.
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Maybe you have a good relationship with a client, for example. You can say, “Yeah,
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the deal next week, it will be a slam dunk.” You know that something good is going to happen.
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Next, “covering all bases.” This phrase means that you plan for as many things as
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you possibly can. You have some kind of plan in mind for any number of things that could
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go wrong or any number of things that could happen. Uhm in a sentence, umm… A boss might
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say to their subordinate, “So what's your plan for the event next week? Make sure you
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have all bases covered. I don't want anything to go wrong.”
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“Next is “playing hardball.” “Playing hardball” is used when you're really, really
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aggressively competing with somebody. So in a sentence, uh, maybe after a business meeting,
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you might say, “Oh, wow, our competitors were really playing hardball in there. It
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was really tough.”
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Okay, end! That's the end. Those are all some sports metaphors that get used in business
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settings, so give them a try in your next business meeting, but be careful to use the
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correct one. Thanks for joining us for Weekly Words this week. I will see you again next
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time for more fun information. Bye!