on the mark
Appearance
English
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Audio (General Australian): (file)
Prepositional phrase
[edit]- (idiomatic) Precisely accurate; correct or appropriate.
- 1989 Feb. 12, Beverly Lowry, "Books: Everyone is somebody's child" (review of Equal Affections by David Leavitt), New York Times (retrieved 14 Sept 2017):
- The writing was often good, his feel for characters on the mark, but the book was wordy.
- 2013 June 7, Phillip Inman, “9 reasons Keynesians aren't winning the argument”, in Guardian, UK, retrieved 14 Sept 2017:
- Three eminent mainstream British economists told MPs . . . that the government had struck the right balance between cuts and spending. Austerity is bang on the mark, they said.
- 2016 June 25, Joel Connelly, “Older, grayer, battle-scarred Obama still 'fired up, ready to go'”, in Seattle Post-Intelligencer, retrieved 14 Sept 2017:
- The Republicans haven't always been on the mark with doomsday predictions about Democratic presidents.
- 1989 Feb. 12, Beverly Lowry, "Books: Everyone is somebody's child" (review of Equal Affections by David Leavitt), New York Times (retrieved 14 Sept 2017):
Synonyms
[edit]- bang on, on the dot, on the money; see also Thesaurus:exactly
Antonyms
[edit]Translations
[edit]precisely accurate
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