Weekly English Words with Alisha Sports Metaphors in Business

Wooh! Welcome back to Weekly Words, everybody. My name is Alisha, and this week we’re going

to talk about sports metaphors in business. This is gonna get real dude-like, real fast.

First phrase, rather, is “jump the gun.”
“Jump the gun” means you do something

too quickly or you don’t think enough about something before you do it. In a business

setting, maybe a subordinate makes a decision before the bosses had a chance to decide on

something. You might say, “Stevens, you
jumped the gun again. We can’t forgive you

for this one. You’re fired!”

Okay, the next one is “drop the ball.”
“Drop the ball” means you don’t do something

that you’re supposed to do. Somebody was supposed to do something, and they didn’t do it. They

“dropped the ball.” Like in basketball,
right? If you have a ball, you’re supposed

to pass the ball to a teammate. If you drop the ball, you let everybody down. “My co-worker

really dropped the ball when he forgot to
send that email. We were all

disappointed.” Stevens, uh, okay.

Next, “slam dunk.” A “slam dunk” is
something that you are sure is going to happen.

Maybe you have a good relationship with a client, for example. You can say, “Yeah,

the deal next week, it will be a slam dunk.”
You know that something good is going to happen.

Next, “covering all bases.” This phrase
means that you plan for as many things as

you possibly can. You have some kind of plan in mind for any number of things that could

go wrong or any number of things that could happen. Uhm in a sentence, umm… A boss might

say to their subordinate, “So what’s your
plan for the event next week? Make sure you

have all bases covered. I don’t want anything to go wrong.”

“Next is “playing hardball.” “Playing
hardball” is used when you’re really, really

aggressively competing with somebody. So in a sentence, uh, maybe after a business meeting,

you might say, “Oh, wow, our competitors
were really playing hardball in there. It

was really tough.”

Okay, end! That’s the end. Those are all some sports metaphors that get used in business

settings, so give them a try in your next
business meeting, but be careful to use the

correct one. Thanks for joining us for Weekly Words this week. I will see you again next

time for more fun information. Bye!

哇! 欢迎回到每周词汇,大家。 我的名字是 Alisha,本周我们

将讨论商业中的体育隐喻。 这会变得像老兄一样,真的很快。

相反,第一句话是“跳枪”。
“开枪”是指你做某事

太快,或者你在做某事之前没有充分考虑。 在商业

环境中,也许下属在老板有机会做出决定之前就做出了决定

。 你可能会说,“史蒂文斯,你
又开枪了。 我们不能原谅

你这个。 你被开除了!”

好的,下一个是“丢球”。
“丢球”意味着你没有做

你应该做的事情。 有人应该做某事,但他们没有做。 他们

“丢球”。 就像篮球一样,
对吧? 如果你有球,你应该

把球传给队友。 如果你丢球,你会让每个人都失望。 “当我的同事

忘记发送那封电子邮件时,他真的丢了球
。 我们都很

失望。” 史蒂文斯,嗯,好吧。

接下来,“灌篮”。 “灌篮”是
你确定会发生的事情。

例如,也许您与客户的关系很好。 你可以说,“是的,

下周的交易,这将是一个扣篮。”
你知道会有好事发生。

接下来,“覆盖所有基础”。 这句话的
意思是你尽可能多地计划事情

。 对于任何可能

出错的事情或任何可能发生的事情,你都有某种计划。 嗯,一句话,嗯……老板可能

会对下属说:“那你
对下周的活动有什么计划? 确保您

已涵盖所有基础。 我不希望任何事情出错。”

“接下来是‘打硬仗’。
当你真的非常非常积极地与某人竞争时,就会使用“打硬仗”

。 所以一句话,呃,也许在一次商务会议之后,

你可能会说,“哦,哇,我们的
竞争对手在那里真的很强硬。

这真的很艰难。”

好,结束! 这就是结束。 这些都是在商业环境中使用的一些体育隐喻

,所以在你的下一次
商务会议中尝试一下,但要小心使用

正确的隐喻。 感谢您加入我们本周的每周词汇。 下次我会再见到你,

以获得更多有趣的信息。 再见!