down the line
Appearance
English
[edit]Prepositional phrase
[edit]- (idiomatic) Further along, in terms of time or progress.
- They decided to save money by using the cheapest components available, but down the line they ran into problems with reliability.
- 2018 July 3, Phil McNulty, “Colombia 1 - 1 England”, in BBC Sport[1]:
- Southgate's side cast off the clouds of dread that have come over England in penalty shootouts in the past, a psychological lift that may yet help them further down the line.
- 2023 November 4, Madhumita Murgia, Anna Gross, Cristina Criddle, “Summit exposes tensions over AI development despite emollient Chinese tone”, in FT Weekend, page 12:
- The person said one of the reasons the Chinese had been so pliant in development of a joint position on AI governance was that “playing nice” and acting as a “responsible partner” could help foster conversations about relaxation of US trade barriers later down the line.
Synonyms
[edit]Translations
[edit]further along — see down the track