The phrase par for the course means something that is normal or common; it’s what you would expect to happen. Example: Calvin had lived in Greenland for most of his life, but he has recently moved to California. The warmer temperature wasn’t the only difference he had to get accustomed to; there were also more bugs crawling around.
“From one perspective, par-3 courses are a test of precision. More important, I think, they’re a joy to play for golfers of every caliber. Par-3 courses lack the formality you see at quote-unquote real courses, where you have to follow golf’s various conventions, like four players maximum to a group.
There are usually from two to six par-5 holes on a full-sized 18-hole golf course, with four (two on the front nine, two on the back nine) being the most common number of par 5s.
Which makes the case of at-large School Board member Abrar Omeish less an aberration and more par for the course. Omeish gained a degree of infamy in certain circles over recent weeks for social-media screeds about Israel.
It is all about politics rather than security, and this is par for the course. I suppose that is par for the course. I am referring to tides, winds and storms, which are also par for the course with maritime transport and which had to be considered. But never mind, perhaps it is par for the course on this subject.
You can say "That's par for the course". PS I just saw E2EFour's reply. He understood you where I didn't. Yes, you can leave "about" in or take it out.
Definition of parcourse : a trail for jogging that has stations at regular intervals with equipment for calisthenics (as sit-ups or pull-ups)
This term comes from golf, where it refers to the number of strokes needed by an expert golfer to finish the entire course. Its figurative use for other kinds of expectation dates from the second half of the 1900s.
Definition of butter up transitive verb. : to charm or beguile with lavish flattery or praise.
Par 72Masters TournamentTournament informationEstablishedMarch 22, 1934 85 EditionsCourse(s)Augusta National Golf ClubPar72Length7,475 yards (6,835 m)15 more rows
For golf purposes, the USGA defined "par" as, "the score that an expert player would be expected to make for a given hole. Par means expert play under ordinary weather conditions, allowing two strokes on the putting green."
According to the Oxford English Dictionary, "par" derives from the Latin, meaning "equal" or "equality," and dates to the 16th Century. Outside of golf, the word is often used to denote a standard level or to mean average, usual, ordinary. If something is "subpar," it is below average.
The term was transferred to other activities in the 1920s, but often with a mildly derogatory or deprecatory connotation, as in “He’s nearly half an hour late; that’s just about par for the course.” To be up to par also means “to meet a standard or norm,” while below par means “less than satisfactory, ” and by extension in poor spirits or health. Thus C. E. Montague (1867–1928) wrote (Fiery Particles), “I was born below par to the extent of two whiskies.”
COMMON If something that happens is par for the course, it is not good but it is what you expect. Note: In golf, `par' is the number of strokes a good golfer is expected to take for a particular hole or for the whole course. There's leaves and branches all over the streets, and the power is out. But that's all par for the course in a hurricane. Long hours are par for the course in his job.
Webster’s New World College Dictionary, 4th Edition. Copyright © 2010 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. All rights reserved.
Most material © 2005, 1997, 1991 by Penguin Random House LLC. Modified entries © 2019 by Penguin Random House LLC and HarperCollins Publishers Ltd
He said long hours are par for the course. `I'm up every morning at six, or even earlier.'