toehold
See also: toe-hold and toe hold
English
Alternative forms
- toe-hold, toe hold
Etymology
From toe + hold.
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /ˈtəʊhəʊld/
Audio (Berkshire, UK) (file)
Noun
toehold (plural toeholds)
- (climbing) A foothold small enough to support just the toe.
- (by extension) Any small advantage which allows one to make significant progress; a slight footing or foothold.
- 1990, Peter Hopkirk, The Great Game, Folio Society 2010, p. 151:
- Were Herat to fall to the Persians, this would give the Russians a crucial and dangerous toe-hold in western Afghanistan.
- 1995, Neal Stephenson, The Diamond Age, Bantam Spectra, →ISBN, page 373:
- The tiny old houses and flats of this once impoverished quarter had mostly been refurbished into toeholds for young Atlantans from all around the Anglosphere, poor in equity but rich in expectations, who had come to the great city to incubate their careers.
- 2009 December 8, Alan Travis, “More young adults in 20s and 30s living with parents than in past 20 years”, in The Guardian:
- One in three "adult-kids" who have not left the parental nest say they are still living at home because they cannot afford to get a toehold on the property ladder by buying or renting.
- 2017 September 7, Ferdinand Mount, “Umbrageousness”, in London Review of Books:
- Strachey argued that the Raj was bad for Britain and the British. In Inglorious Empire, Shashi Tharoor argues, with equal passion, that it was much worse for India and the Indians. In 1700, when the British were mere traders clinging on to a few coastal toeholds, the Emperor Aurangzeb ruled over a country that accounted for a quarter of the world’s economy.
- 1990, Peter Hopkirk, The Great Game, Folio Society 2010, p. 151:
- (wrestling) A hold in which the aggressor bends back the opponent's foot.
Translations
Any small advantage
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See also
- foothold