English edit

Etymology edit

From the world of horse race betting, where lists of winners would be published with non-paying positions printed in a block under the heading “Also Ran”.

Noun edit

also-ran (plural also-rans)

  1. A person or animal who competed in a race but did not win.
  2. (figuratively) A loser; a person or thing soon to be forgotten.
    • 1960 June 18, “Nerves of Steel”, in The New York Times:
      It also turned Palmer from an also-ran into a challenger.
    • 1962, Records of the Proceedings and Printed Papers of the Parliament, volume 4, Australia, page 261:
      I have 37 actors and actresses I would supply for television and radio work and then I have maybe 150 to 200 also-rans who get extra work and television commercials.
    • 1978 April 26, Janet Maslin, “Film: Scorsese and the Band”, in The New York Times[1]:
      [] some of Mr. Scorsese's accomplishments have been so stunning—that it's impossible to view "The Last Waltz" as anything but an also-ran.
    • 1993, Martin Yate, Hiring the Best, Adams Media, page 58:
      And, of course, it is also far easier, quicker, and less embarrassing to dismiss an also-ran over the phone than it is in person []
    • 1998, Richard C Dorf, The Technology Management Handbook, CRC Press, page 40:
      [] as the drug came out of the R&D laboratory, it could have been just another also-ran []
    • 2004 August 9, The New Yorker, page 40:
      The transition from comer to also-ran can be quick []

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