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near miss
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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English
Alternative forms
- near-miss
Noun
near miss (plural near misses)
- A miss which was nearly a hit or collision.
- Synonym: (aviation) airmiss
- 1978, John F. Hilgenberg, quotee, edited by Arthur J. C. Lavalle, Last flight from Saigon, USAF, page 101:
- […] two aircraft, one flying level across the field, another climbing after a missed approach, had an extremely near miss, in my estimation, less than 50 feet, before the lower pilot saw the higher aircraft and broke violently to the right in the darkness.
- 2000, Samuel B. Griffith, The Battle for Guadalcanal, University of Illinois Press, →ISBN, page 177:
- The first wave, 24 dive bombers, fell on her through broken clouds; she took two hits and an uncomfortably close near miss.
- 2019 October 23, Rail, page 19:
- […] it concludes that when the number of 'near misses' are considered, "we have been extremely fortunate that we have not been discussing much higher fatality figures, given that a significant number of track workers have 'got clear' within a few seconds or less of passing trains".
- 2025 June 12, Justin McCurry, Helen Davidson, “Chinese fighter jet in near miss with Japan military plane as Pacific tensions rise”, in The Guardian, →ISSN:
- Japan has voiced “serious concern” over a near miss involving one of its military planes and a Chinese fighter jet in the Pacific, where recent manoeuvres by Chinese aircraft carrier groups have raised tensions across the region.
- (by extension) A scenario which ends safely but might well have ended in disaster.
- Synonyms: close shave, narrow escape
- 2009 April 27, Mine Safety, Health Administration, Failure to Operate Boom Trucks Safely Using Proper Procedures:
- In recent years there have been two fatalities and one near miss due to the inappropriate use of boom trucks.
- (by extension) An attempt which fails narrowly; a performance which falls just short of a certain benchmark.
- 2025, “Tina”, in Jarvis Cocker (lyrics), More, performed by Pulp:
- All those places we never met / Near misses / Your lipstick on my coffee cup
Usage notes
It is sometimes claimed that concept of a near miss would be better expressed as near hit. However, near is used in the phrase with the sense “close” (compare “near future”, “near neighbour”) rather than the sense ”approximate” (compare “near certainty”, “near standstill”).
Antonyms
Translations
Translations
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References
- E. Ward Gilman (editor) Merriam–Webster's Dictionary of English Usage p.655, Merriam–Webster, 1994 →ISBN.
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