last roundup
Appearance
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]An allusion to herding of cattle into a group.
Noun
[edit]last roundup (plural last roundups)
- (chiefly US, idiomatic) A final gathering of people or items; the final event in a series of events involving a group or organization.
- 1998 March 2, Bob Levey, “Last Week to Send Your Grocery Receipts”, in Washington Post, retrieved 1 November 2021:
- It's last roundup time, my fellow grocery patrons. On Saturday, the receipt redemption programs operated by Giant Food and Safeway ended after a 5 1/2-month run.
- 2003 March 26, Eric Gwinn, “Television: Sun shines on cops, doctors, but has long set on cowboys”, in Chicago Tribune, retrieved 1 November 2021:
- [B]y the 1964-65 season, the number of adult westerns had dwindled to seven. That was the genre's last roundup.
- 2011 September 29, Dan Shaughnessy, “Baseball: Red Sox make unwanted history”, in Boston Globe, retrieved 1 November 2021:
- This might have been the last roundup for Papelbon, Tim Wakefield, Jason Varitek, Big Papi, J.D. Drew, Miss Heidi, and several of the others you’ve loved all these years.
- (chiefly US, idiomatic, euphemistic) Death.
- 1973 December 30, Guy Flatley, “Cowboy or Cop, Wayne Never Wanes”, in New York Times, retrieved 1 November 2021:
- So Duke is 66. But don't kid yourself that he's headed for the last roundup—even though it may have looked that way a while back when he surrendered a lung to cancer.
- 1977, Bill Reed, Dogod, Thomas Nelson (Australia) (reprinted 2015 by Reed Independent):
- [H]e swears that Jelf is going to beat him to the last roundup in the sky.
- 2006 July 8, “Bullish on life”, in Los Angeles Times, retrieved 1 November 2021:
- [N]ot everyone who runs with the bulls is young, male, drunk and stupid. […] It also is a way for people of a certain age to do something extraordinary before their last roundup.