English

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Etymology

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Compare the phrase "beat badly"; see badly (very much; to a great degree).

Adjective

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bad to beat (not comparable)

  1. (slang, archaic) Difficult to beat; sure to succeed.
    • 1861, Anne Bowman, Among the Tartar Tents, Or, The Lost Fathers, page 183:
      "But, you see, they know nothing of discipline. If they'd only form reg'lar, and stand firm in a square, they'd be bad to beat, as them dogs of robbers would find."
    • 1886, The Breeder's Gazette, page 274:
      Twenty-one yearling fillies faced the judges, and in this competition Mr. Clark's Silver Queen was an easy first, and with a little more flesh and condition will be bad to beat.

References

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  • John Camden Hotten (1873) The Slang Dictionary