hard pass
Appearance
English
[edit]Noun
[edit]hard pass (plural hard passes)
- An enduring (non-temporary) clearance to enter the West Wing of the White House, signified by a laminated card.
- 1996, Deposition Transcripts from the Committee Investigation Into the White House Office Travel Matter, →ISBN:
- Did you, in fact, issue a hard pass to Mr. Shapiro? The Witness. I don't recall, but it would be easy to find out.
- 1997, United States Congress Senate Special Committee to Investigate Whitewater Development Corporation and Related Matters, Investigation of Whitewater Development Corporation and related matters, →ISBN:
- The reason I always wore my hard pass was because I was in charge partly of White House security.
- 2007, Martha Joynt Kumar, Managing the President's Message, →ISBN:
- In renewing passes, the Press Office and the Secret Service check how often the reporters have entered the White House in order to establish the need for such a credential. Now there are approximately 800 hard pass holders.
- 2012, Nicolle Wallace, It's Classified: A Novel, →ISBN, page 32:
- She still didn't have a hard pass, the official “all access ticket” to the West Wing. The hard pass signaled to the Secret Service that a complete background check had been turned in by the FBI.
- (informal) An unequivocal rejection with no possibility of a later change of mind.
- 2003, The Indus Entrepreneurs, Essentials of Entrepreneurship, →ISBN:
- A hard pass is usually pretty clear: It says that there is no way the VC will invest in your company.
- 2016, Maisey Yates, Last Chance Rebel, →ISBN:
- Thanks, but I'm going to take a hard pass on your blood money.
- 2016, Kendall Ryan, The Fix Up, →ISBN:
- Nope. That's a hard pass. I set her profile aside. I might be willing to set him up, but not with someone who's freaking perfect.
- (sports) A pass to another player that is delivered with a particularly high level of force.
- 1995, John Shorey, Hockey Made Easy : Instructional Manual, →ISBN, page 42:
- A soft feather pass is easier to receive and control over a hard pass.
- 1999, H.C. Dubey, Dph Sports Series-Football, →ISBN, page 164:
- The player with the ball, X,, has his team-mate in sight and can deliver a hard pass to that player's feet.
- 2006, Dick DeVenzio, Stuff Good Players Should Know: Intelligent Basketball from A to Z, →ISBN:
- You don't throw a hard pass if you can throw it softly.
- 2012, Jim Hinkson, Lacrosse Fundamentals, →ISBN, page 31:
- Throwing to an experienced player, a passer should throw a hard pass knowing he could catch it with no problem.
- (dated) A difficult time in one's life, especially one characterized by financial difficulties.
- 1821, Sir Walter Scott, Kenilworth:
- I need her prayers, for I am at a hard pass — Strange reports are abroad concerning my way of life.
- 1873, Charles Gibbon, The casquet of literature, a selection in poetry and prose:
- "It's a' true!" exclaimed Bauldie Queech, in voice of great distress, "it's an ower true tale, as I ken fu' weel, and fu' sadly, though I didna think to hae tauld what I ken o't to ony ane but the minister: but Rory, ye're a fearless and lang-headed chiel at a hard pass, and as ever ye did gude to a puir body at their wits' ends, ye maun e'en help me now."
- 1885, National and English Review - Volume 5, page 25:
- In the first the supernumeraries consist, on the one hand, of old actors and actresses, some of them of great ability, whom reverse of fortune has brought to this hard pass ; on the other, of ambitious young aspirants of the better class, who are, fortunately for them, undergoing a course of artistic training under Mr. Barrett's able tuition.