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“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.
An average or normal amount; just what one might expect. For example, I missed three questions, but that's par for the course. This term comes from golf, where it refers to the number of strokes needed by an expert golfer to finish the entire course.
Par for the course is an idiom that has been in a little over fifty years. We will examine the meaning of the idiomatic term par for the course, where it came from, and some examples of its use in sentences. Par for the course describes something that may be expected, the usual, something that is normal.
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.
Normal, typical, or to be expected (especially when something is a source of annoyance or frustration). An allusion to golf, in which "par" is the number of strokes that it should take a player to get the ball into a particular hole on a golf course.
Start doing something too soon, act too hastily. For example, The local weather bureau jumped the gun on predicting a storm; it didn't happen for another two days. This expression alludes to starting a race before the starter's gun has gone off, and supplants the earlier beat the pistol, which dates from about 1900. [
An expression used of someone who is too involved in the details of a problem to look at the situation as a whole: “The congressman became so involved in the wording of his bill that he couldn't see the forest for the trees; he did not realize that the bill could never pass.”
If something is not your cup of tea, it is not the type of thing that you like: Thanks for inviting me, but ballet isn't really my cup of tea. Not liking. abhor. abide.
Definition of butter up transitive verb. : to charm or beguile with lavish flattery or praise.
A person away from his or her usual environment or activities. For example, Using a computer for the first time, Carl felt like a fish out of water, or On a hiking trail, Nell was a fish out of water. This expression alludes to the fact that fish cannot survive for long on dry land. [
An allusion to golf, in which "par" is the number of strokes that it should take a player to get the ball into a particular hole on a golf course.
Definition of the third degree : a long and intense period of questioning The police gave him the third degree [=questioned him intensely]. Mom always gives me the third degree when I get home late.
Definition of up to par : good enough : as good as expected or wanted She was checking to see if his work was up to par. —usually used in negative statements His coursework is not up to par. She's not feeling up to par.
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.'
Meaning: 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.
For example, if you were at a par-five hole at a golf course, that means it should take a total of 5 swings to finish.
Basically, a “par” is considered to be a “normal” score in golf. Eventually, it seems the saying ‘par for the course’ became an idiom that was used for other things that were considered normal or expected.
The school budget is going to be cut again this year, but then that’s par for the course.
These expressions contrast with fixed idioms such as long time no see or par for the course, which occur in a single fully specified form.
Par is not the same between holes, it varies of course. And length is what is taken into account in determining the number of strokes needed for completing a hole. This is why the par-3 hole, since it’s a short one, requires a single stroke (by a highly skilled golfer), followed by two putts.
BIRDIE – 1-under par, that is 1 stroke under par is referred to as a birdie. Good examples would be 4 strokes on par-5, 3 strokes on par-4, and 2 strokes on par-3.
The logic is pretty straightforward – longer holes equal to higher par.
That would be 72 for your regular 18-hole round of golf. As for a 9-hole golf course, the average is par-3.
You can use the term ‘par’ in multiple ways for the game of golf. But USGA defines it as the total number of strokes any expert golfer would take for completing an individual hole. And it goes without saying that this also depends on the difficulty and length of the hole.