spitting distance

English

Alternative forms

  • shouting distance

Noun

spitting distance (plural spitting distances)

  1. (idiomatic) A short distance.
    • 1840, A. Traveller, Notes upon Canada and the United States: from 1832 to 1840, Rogers and Thompson (Toronto), p. 180:
      [N]o less than forty defaulters in the executive, within spitting distance of the President, have not alone been proved so, but still retain their places.
    • 1899 April 27, Rudyard Kipling, quoted in "A Fleet in Being: Men who take their chances," West Coast Times (New Zealand), p. 4 (retrieved 15 Oct 2010):
      "In these craft they risk the extreme perils of the sea. . . . They have been within spitting distance of collision and bumping distance of the bottom."
    • 1972, John Pearson, "Science Worldwide," Popular Mechanics, September, p. 36:
      They live within spitting distance of a busy runway at London's Heathrow Airport.
    • 2007, Paul Levine, Trial & Error, →ISBN, p. 120:
      "Look around. Justice Building. County Jail. Sheriff's Department. A thousand cops within spitting distance."

Usage notes

  • This term usually refers to a spatial distance, but is sometimes used in an extended manner to indicate a "distance" which is other than spatial, as, for example, in:
  • 1982, Hans Fantel, "Fusion: We're Harnessing The Power Of The H-Bomb," Popular Mechanics, September, p. 86:
    But two gigantic research projects—one at Princeton University, the other at the University of Rochester—are finally getting within spitting distance of producing useful energy from fusion reactions.

See also

Translations

References

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