pointy end
English
editAlternative forms
editNoun
editpointy end (plural pointy ends)
- (chiefly Australia) The part of something which is the most extreme in some aspect (for example, the most difficult, the latest chronologically or the highest numerically).
- 2010 June 24, Mike Jacoubowsky, “Lance Armstrong pulls out of the Tour de France !!!”, in rec.bicycles.racing[1] (Usenet), message-ID <mNSdnc5qYtPBt7_RnZ2dnUVZ_qCdnZ2d@earthlink.com>:
- Lance has nothing to worry about. Others may; some young idiot is going to see an opportunity to take advantage of a possibly-clean pointy end of the pack and do something stupid, thinking he might get away with it.
- 2018, Sam Mitchell, Relentless, Macmillan Publishers Aus., →ISBN:
- It would be a surprise if this wasn't a key focus for all clubs in the 'Big Dance' at the pointy end of the year.
- 2018 November 28, Young, Andy, “Industry urged to engage with Sydney’s late-night trading plan”, in The Shout[2], archived from [3] on 27 August 2020.
- But the point I really want to make is that we need you, as the industry, to help make people care about [this plan]. The public consultation is the pointy end of this whole process for the 'late night map of fun'.
- 2019, Jacquie Underdown, Meet Me in the Middle (Wattle Valley, #2), HarperCollins Australia, →ISBN:
- They were getting to the pointy end of the season, only a couple of months until the finals.
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see pointy, end.
- at the pointy end of the plane