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at bat

[at bat]

adverb

Baseball.
  1. taking one's turn to bat in a game.

    And now Sanchez is at bat with two runners in scoring position.



noun

Baseball.
  1. a player’s turn to bat, officially recorded as such unless the batter walks, is hit by a pitch, makes a sacrifice hit, or is interfered with by the catcher.

    In her debut appearance with the Rockford Peaches, she posted two hits in three at-bats.

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Word History and Origins

Origin of at bat1

First recorded in 1880–85
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Idioms and Phrases

Taking one's turn. For example, At this conference, with so many interruptions, it's hard to tell which speaker is at bat, or I was nervous while waiting to testify, but once at bat I felt better. This idiom, from baseball, was already being transferred to other enterprises by the 1880s. Also see on deck.
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Then came her most important at bat of the season.

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Westlake was unable to rally in the bottom of the seventh, ending a streak of six straight home games in which the Warriors won on walk-offs in their final at bat.

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The facts show that Trump is quite aware of how to deal with American voters in his second time at bat from the Oval Office and he obviously doesn’t care what his detractors think.

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“Those early kind of signals can be helpful for understanding the progression of the fungus, of where it’s getting to,” said Winifred Frick, chief scientist at Bat Conservation International and an adjunct professor in ecology and evolutionary biology at UC Santa Cruz.

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Can he still generate the power needed to be productive at bat?

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