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Definition 2024
only_game_in_town
only game in town
English
Noun
only game in town (usually uncountable, plural only games in town)
- (idiomatic, almost always preceded by the) The only opportunity, activity, or resource available.
- 1973, Stanley Elkin, Searches & Seizures: Three Novellas, Boston, Mass.: Nonpareil Books, David R. Godine, Publisher, ISBN 978-0-87923-253-5, page 265:
- It was the first elected position he had ever held, his single incumbency and, he had to admit, his best prospect, the only game in town.
- 1999 November, Rebecca Rohan, “Beyond the browser wars: Navigator and Explorer aren't the only games in town”, in Black Enterprise, volume 30, number 3, New York, N.Y.: Earl G. Graves Publishing, ISSN 0006-4165, page 48:
- If you surf the Web, chances are you're using some version of either Netscape Navigator or Microsoft Internet Explorer. […] But contrary to popular belief, they aren't the only games in town. While the two combatants offer great interfaces and features, there is something to be said for taking the road less traveled.
- 1999 December 12, “Will the yen's surge do Japan in?”, in BusinessWeek, retrieved 1 January 2014:
- When exports are the only game in town, currency gyrations can be a killer.
- 2007, Charles Taylor, “What is Secularity?”, in Kevin [Jon] Vanhoozer and Martin Warner, editors, Transcending Boundaries in Philosophy and Theology: Reason, Meaning and Experience (Transcending Boundaries in Philosophy and Theology), Aldershot, Hampshire; Burlington, Vt.: Ashgate Publishing, ISBN 978-0-7546-5318-9, page 69:
- Once myth and error are dissipated, these are the only games in town. The empirical approach is the only valid way of acquiring knowledge, and this becomes evident as soon as we free ourselves from the thraldom of a false metaphysics.
- 2013 October 24, Adewale Maja-Pearce, “Nigeria's talking shop”, in The New York Times, archived from the original on 29 October 2013, retrieved 1 January 2014:
- Political power, after all, is the only game in town that ensures unfettered access to the nation's oil riches.
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References
- ↑ For example, see Upton Sinclair (March 1908), chapter 8, in The Metropolis, New York, N.Y.: Moffat, Yard & Company, OCLC 1925780: “It’s like the story they tell about my brother—he was losing money in a gambling-place in Saratoga, and some one said to him, ‘Davy, why do you go there—don’t you know the game is crooked?’ ‘Of course it’s crooked,’ said he, ‘but, damn it, it’s the only game in town!’”
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