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Verb edit

mail it in (third-person singular simple present mails it in, present participle mailing it in, simple past and past participle mailed it in)

  1. Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see mail,‎ it,‎ in.
  2. (idiomatic) To deliver a performance without commitment or effort, with lackluster results.
    • 2008 January 11, Bill Keveney, “Idol tries to get its groove back”, in USA Today, page 1A:
      "I do think the judges mailed it in during Season 6, relative to previous years," Welton says. "Simon needs to be nastier. [] "
    • 2009 January/February, Keith Bellows, “Go, But Go Green”, in National Geographic, volume 26, number 1, page 22:
      So when you have to write two columns a week that are going to be read by a lot of people around the world, you can't just mail it in. You're thinking all the time.
    • 2010 May 25, Joe Cowley, “Crunch time comes early; Sox 7 Indians 2; Peavy^s point: Next month is make or break”, in The Chicago Sun-Times:
      Listen, we're not mailing it in, we're trying to get better.

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