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one-horse race. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
one-horse race, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
one-horse race in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
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English
Pronunciation
Noun
one-horse race (plural one-horse races)
- (horse racing, informal) A horse race in which a single horse takes such a considerable lead that the other horses are no longer contenders to win.
1927 June 13, “Sport: Again, McAtee”, in Time, retrieved 26 July 2014:Since riding Harry Payne Whitney's Whiskery to victory in the Kentucky Derby, Jockey Linus ("Pony") McAtee has twice broken into the news in unconventional fashion. A fortnight ago, he won a one-horse race ("walkover") at Belmont Park, N. Y.
- (idiomatic, by extension) An election campaign or other competitive situation in which only one competitor is entered or in which only one competitor has a realistic chance of winning.
1995 January 19, Andrew Marshall, “Balladur takes first step to presidency”, in The Independent, UK, retrieved 26 July 2014:Although Mr Balladur is far ahead in the opinion polls, the spring election is far from being a one-horse race.
1998 April 5, Robert D. Hof, “Commentary: JAVA can be a contender—If Sun lets it”, in Businessweek, retrieved 26 July 2014:A system for creating software that runs, unaltered, on all sorts of computers and devices . . . could transform the software business in the network era from a one-horse race led by Microsoft to a true contest.
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