WORD OF THE DAY
sandbag / verb / SAND-bag
Definition
1: to bank, stop up, or weight with sandbags
2a: to hit or stun with or as if with a sandbag
2b: to treat unfairly or harshly
2c: to coerce by crude means
2d:to conceal or misrepresent one's true position, potential, or intent especially in order to take advantage over
2e: to hide the truth about oneself so as to gain an advantage over another
Examples
Management must have realized that reading employee survey responses aloud at the company-wide meeting would make employees feel sandbagged, but they chose to do it anyway.
"Lock's season began with Heisman Trophy dreams. It has detoured toward a familiar and unfortunate destination, the place where the quarterback's career numbers are sandbagged by his struggles when the spotlight shines."
— Ben Frederickson, The St. Louis Post-Dispatch, 3 Nov. 2018
Did You Know?
In the 19th century, the verb sandbag began to be used to describe the act of bludgeoning someone with a small, sand-filled bag—a tactic employed by ruffians, usually as a prelude to robbing their victims. The verb went on to develop metaphorical extensions, such as "to coerce by crude means."
By the 1940s, it was being used of a strategy in which a poker player with a good hand bets weakly, in order to draw other players into holding on to their hands and raising the bet. The use of sandbag has since evolved to refer to a general strategy of playing down one's position in order to gain some sort of advantage.
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