left field
See also: leftfield
English
editPronunciation
editAudio (General Australian): (file)
Noun
editleft field (countable and uncountable, plural left fields)
- (baseball) The part of a baseball field which is beyond the infield and to the left of a person standing on home plate and facing the pitcher.
- 2004 May 10, The New Yorker:
- The double, by pinch-hitter Ruben Sierra, curved sharply toward foul ground in deep left field but then changed its mind and hit the line instead—a big hit, and a smile at last from the great and enigmatically difficult game.
- (baseball) The defensive position in the outfield to the left.
- (figurative) An unexpected, bizarre, or unwatched source (especially in the phrases out of left field and from left field).
- Some of her comments really came from left field. I have no idea what she was thinking.
- 2004 September 23, London Review of Books:
- There is no serendipity without a flash of insight from left field, an oblique eureka effect.
- 2024 July 24, Christian Wolmar, “Rail Minister Hendy has a tough job... but the skills to succeed”, in RAIL, number 1014, page 44:
- There was no shortage of dropped jaws when news came through about the appointment of the recently ennobled Lord Peter Hendy as rail minister. This was certainly a left-field move, taking everyone (perhaps even himself) by surprise.
- (figurative) An unusual or unexpected position, or a viewpoint held by very few others in contrast to the majority viewpoint (especially in the phrases out in left field and way out in left field)
- 1960, Journal of business education[1], volume 35, page 303:
- Tonne is way out in left field if he thinks a voice writing machine will never be built or that there are no existing prototypes or work being done in this […]
Derived terms
edit- leftfield (adjective)