all one's eggs in one basket
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From put all one's eggs in one basket.
Pronunciation
[edit]Audio (General Australian): (file)
Noun
[edit]all one's eggs in one basket pl (plural only)
- The state of having invested heavily in just one area.
- The stock market decline wouldn’t have hurt him so badly if he hadn’t had all his eggs in one basket.
- The state of having devoted all of one’s resources to one thing.
- At his age, he won't get another shot; he really has all his eggs in this one basket.
- 2020 December 2, Andy Byford talks to Paul Clifton, “I enjoy really big challenges...”, in Rail, page 50:
- We have 72% of our income from fares. That can work in good times. But COVID has exposed that we had all our eggs in one basket, dangerously over-reliant on one source of funding that is subject to the whims of the economy... or viruses.
Translations
[edit]put all one's eggs in one basket — see put all one's eggs in one basket
the state of having invested in one area only
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