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“It was one of the most severe beatings they’ve seen on tape,” an FDNY insider said, recalling the reaction by brass who viewed video of the bloody fisticuffs.
(informal) An unthinking, patterned response triggered by a particular stimulus.
Old couples will sometimes play tapes at each other during a fight.
(trading, from ticker tape) The series of prices at which a financial instrument trades.
Don’t fight the tape.
(ice hockey) The wrapping of the primary puck-handling surface of a hockey stick
His pass was right on the tape.
(printing,historical) A strong flexible band rotating on pulleys for directing the sheets in a printing machine.
(possible,obsolete,UK,slang)Liquor, alcoholic drink, especially gin or brandy. (Especially in prison slang or among domestic servants and women.)
white tape, Holland tape, blue tape(gin); red tape(brandy or wine)
1827 (originally 1755?), Connoisseur, page=223:
Madam Gin has been christened by as many names as a German princess : every petty chandler's shop will sell you Sky-blue, and every night-cellar furnish you with Holland tape, three yards a penny. Nor can I see the difference
1817, The White Dwarf: A London Weekly Publication, page 222:
[…] who is now puffing his pipe and sipping his grog, as unconcerned as a Dutch fiddler at a merry-making, has no business here selling his cheese and candles in the day-time, and his yards of tape in the evening: […] and now then for the tape-shop. […]
A tumbler of blue ruin fill, fill for me! / Red tape those as likes it may drain, / But whatever the lush, it a bumper must be. / […] / Oh! those jovial days are ne'er forgot! But the tape lags—When I be's dead, you'll drink one put To poor old Bags!
Clipping of red tape(“time-consuming bureaucratic procedures”).
1923, Henry C. Clark, Departmental Practice, Admission of Attorneys, Etc, page 7:
[When dealing with the] Federal Government, "red tape" is unavoidable. Perseverance, good humor and thoroughness will almost invariably cut through the "tape” or lead to the proper official where courteous and attentive treatment will be received.
1953, United States. Congress. House. Committee on the Judiciary, Hearings, page 53:
He was going to cut through the tape and ship this Army stuff straight to France.
1988, United States Senate Select Committee on Secret Military Assistance to Iran and the Nicaraguan Opposition, Iran-Contra Investigation: One Hundredth Congress, First Session, page 26:
Mr. Cheney: […] to move in the direction of deciding that the only way to get anything done, to cut through the red tape, to be able to move aggressively, is to have it done, in effect, inside the boundary of the White House. […] Mr. North: […] there are certainly times when one has to cut through the tape.
2011 March 1, Simon Maier, Jeremy Kourdi, The 100: Insights and lessons from 100 of the greatest speakers and speeches ever delivered, Marshall Cavendish International Asia Pte Ltd, →ISBN, page 295:
As Treasurer and Governor of Texas, she had an ability to cut through the tape and conventions to get stuff done and make things better. She modernized systems, made government more transparent and accountable and[…]
Be sure to tape your parcel securely before posting it.
2007, Ion Mihai Pacepa, Programmed to Kill:
The agent had to dead-drop the locker key to the PGU by some simple means, such as by taping it underneath a predesignated park bench, where it could be retrieved unobtrusively, usually by an officer under illegal cover.
You shouldn’t have said that. The microphone was on and we were taping.
2016, Doug Stanhope, Digging Up Mother:
The warmup guy — as I now know is common for live audiences in taped television performances — kept fluffing the crowd like they were preschoolers. “Now what are you going to do when we introduce the first comedian?” Wild cheers. “C'mon, that's not good enough! Let's try it again! What are you going to do???”
THE ANCIENT DIALECT OF THE BARONIES OF FORTH AND BARGY, COUNTY WEXFORD:
"Tape"——to turn a car over turning a corner.
References
Kathleen A. Browne (1927) The Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland Sixth Series, Vol.17 No.2, Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland, page 128