See also: slow ball

English

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Etymology

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From slow +‎ ball.

Noun

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slowball (plural slowballs)

  1. (baseball) A pitch that is not a fastball or curveball; often a change-up.
  2. Steady, cautionary behavior as a delaying tactic.
    • 2007 July 1, Jim Rutenberg, “Bush to Urge Putin to Aid in Pressuring Iran”, in New York Times[1]:
      “We imagine that the Russians and the Chinese are going to play slowball here,” said a senior official involved in the sanctions talks.
    • 2011 July 2, Deena Winter, “AG to Google: Clean up YouTube”, in Nebraska Watchdog[2], archived from the original on 5 March 2016:
      But he says the company is dragging its feet and threatened to use his subpoena power to get them moving. “They’re trying to play slowball,” he said of Google.
    • 2012 May 9, Giles Mole, “Ulster v Leinster, Heineken Cup final”, in The Daily Telegraph[3]:
      Dave Kearney then says he's had enough of the slow-ball tactics and bursts through a couple of tackles.
  3. An easy or obvious target.
    • 1998, Mark Alan Stewart, Frederick J. O'Toole, Arco's Teach Yourself to Beat the GRE in 24 Hours, Arco, →ISBN:
      Remember: In work problems, use your common sense to narrow down answer choices! Now we're going to throw a "slowball" at you.
    • 2009, Tom Cavenagh, A Matter of Truth, iUniverse, →ISBN, page 150:
      The interviewer nodded sympathetically. “Why do you think he would react so harshly?” A slowball question he hoped she would knock out of the park from a pro-abortion perspective.
    • 2014, James Wittenbach, Worlds Apart Book 10: Eventide, Booktango, →ISBN:
      The opening for a milk-beast related play on the name Lady Angus was a nice hanging slowball, but Keeler bit his tongue.

Verb

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slowball (third-person singular simple present slowballs, present participle slowballing, simple past and past participle slowballed)

  1. (baseball) To pitch a slowball.
  2. To delay something for personal advantage.
    • 1965, United States, Congress, United States. Congress. Joint Economic Committee, Hearings, Reports and Prints of the Joint Economic Committee:
      A prolonged study is frequently a method of slowballing an investigation until the Senators or Congress who are interested pass from the political scene.
    • 1996, Tae-Hwan Kwak, Edward A. Olsen, The Major Powers of Northeast Asia: Seeking Peace and Security, Lynne Rienner Publishers, →ISBN, page 170:
      As one senior U.S. military observer stated: "They are stonewalling us and slowballing us."
    • 2010, J. DAVID BUTLER, THE WATER BALL: A story of faith and enduring love, Xlibris Corporation, →ISBN:
      And if some guy is dipping into the funds or taking bribes or slowballing things, those people should be exposed.

See also

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Anagrams

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