double-team
See also: double team
English
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Verb
editdouble-team (third-person singular simple present double-teams, present participle double-teaming, simple past and past participle double-teamed)
- (transitive, sports) In sports involving offensive and defensive teams, to use two defensive players to guard against the movements of a single offensive player.
- 1949 January 24, “Stop St. Louis!”, in Time:
- On any given night, Pivotman Macauley was good for at least 18 points a game. But because L.I.U. double-teamed him (he had two men guarding him), he didn't bother to shoot much.
- (transitive, by extension) To deal with or handle a task or individual person by using a team of two people.
- 2008 January 21, Kathy Kiely, “Clinton, Obama step up attacks at South Carolina debate”, in USA Today, retrieved 6 Jan. 2009:
- Obama . . . accused the Clintons of double-teaming him on the campaign trail. "I can't tell who I'm running against sometimes," he said.
- 2023 September 19, Chaise Sanders, “50 Best Halloween Costumes of All Time, From the Classics to the Truly Unique”, in Cosmopolitan[1]:
- Movie buffs will love this costume from Beetlejuice. And even if you don't have someone to double team this look with, each costume can easily slay on its own.
- (transitive, slang, of two people) To double penetrate someone.
- 2015, Double Lucky. Jackie Collins. 2015.
- He and M.J. had double-teamed her—with her consent—on a drunken prom night.
- 2015, Double Lucky. Jackie Collins. 2015.
- (transitive, slang) To gang up on someone, as a group of two.
- 2012, Eleanor Choukas Anderson, Out of Her Shadow[2], page 557:
- one day they double-teamed her into a closet and threatened to lock her in if she didn't show them her privates.
Coordinate terms
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extended, non-sports meaning
References
edit- “double-team”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.