English edit

Noun edit

full ride (plural full rides)

  1. A scholarship that covers all tuition, and in some cases fees or other educational and living expenses as well.
    • 2007, Applying Amateurism in the Global Sports Arena, →ISBN, page 22:
      The Ivy Group and the Big Ten were the most notable conferences to initially avoid full ride scholarships.
    • 2009, James E. Davis, 2049, →ISBN, page 233:
      If you showed half the interest in school as most of the kids, you could get a full ride to any college in the country.
    • 2012, Kaira Rouda, All The Difference, →ISBN, page 121:
      For some reason, his college counselor saw talent in Ron that he didn't see himself, and when the SAT scores came out, Ron was offered a full ride to Louisiana State.
    • 2014, Ron Perlman, Easy Street (the Hard Way): A Memoir, →ISBN, page 52:
      But because we didn't have any money, the notion of applying to a college that specialized in theater— by that time the die was fully cast—seemed a waste of time unless I was going to get a full ride.
  2. A total and complete experience of something.
    • 1997, New Monologues for Mature Actors, →ISBN, page 65:
      You had better get off your ass and be my husband because I signed on for the full ride.
    • 2008, Charles H. Staples, Cancer Ain't Nothing But a Pimple Ta God, →ISBN, page 45:
      Only this time, I knew I was going for the full ride. The only thing was that I didn't know was what kind of ride I was going on.
    • 2010, Thomas R. Lindlof, Bryan C. Taylor, Qualitative Communication Research Methods, →ISBN, page xii:
      Advanced readers may, as a result, wish to read selectively, but we believe that novices will benefit from taking the full ride.
  3. Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see full,‎ ride.