steal a march on

steal a march on
phrasal also get a march on
: to get ahead of or win an advantage over especially unexpectedly and with sly adroitness

stole a march on his competitors by being the first to put the product on the market

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steal a march on
To gain an advantage over, esp in a sly or secret manner
• • •
Main Entry:march
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steal a march on see under ↑march1
• • •
Main Entry:steal

* * *

gain an advantage over (someone), typically by acting before they do

stores that open on Sunday are stealing a march on their competitors

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steal a march on
chiefly Brit : to get ahead of or win an advantage over (someone) in an unexpected and clever way

He stole a march on his competitors by being the first to put the product on the market.

• • •
Main Entry:march
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steal a march on — see march, 2
• • •
Main Entry:steal

Useful english dictionary. 2012.

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  • steal a march on sb — ► to get an advantage over someone by acting before they do: »Our chief competitor managed to steal a march on us by bringing out their software ahead of ours. Main Entry: ↑steal …   Financial and business terms

  • steal a march on — (someone/something) to spoil someone s plans and get an advantage over them by doing something sooner or better than them. The company plans to steal a march on its competitors by offering the same computer at a lower price …   New idioms dictionary

  • steal a march — This expression indicates the stealthiness of a person over another to gain advantage of the situation. For instance, if two persons are offered some jobs which are vacant, they resolve to go together next day at an agreed time, but one of them,… …   The small dictionary of idiomes

  • steal a march on — ► steal a march on gain an advantage over by taking early action. Main Entry: ↑steal …   English terms dictionary

  • steal a march —    If you steal a march on someone, you do something in an unexpected or secret way that enables you to gain an advantage over them.     We were able to steal a march on other retailers by immediately offering a 10% reduction on orders received… …   English Idioms & idiomatic expressions

  • steal a march on someone — steal a march on (someone/something) to spoil someone s plans and get an advantage over them by doing something sooner or better than them. The company plans to steal a march on its competitors by offering the same computer at a lower price …   New idioms dictionary

  • steal a march on something — steal a march on (someone/something) to spoil someone s plans and get an advantage over them by doing something sooner or better than them. The company plans to steal a march on its competitors by offering the same computer at a lower price …   New idioms dictionary

  • steal a march (on somebody) — steal a ˈmarch (on sb) idiom no passive to gain an advantage over sb by doing sth before them • The company is looking at ways to steal a march on its European competitors. Main entry: ↑stealidiom …   Useful english dictionary

  • steal a march on someone — phrase to get an advantage over someone by secretly starting something that they had planned to do Thesaurus: to do something before someone elsesynonym Main entry: steal …   Useful english dictionary

  • steal a march on — {v. phr.} To get ahead of someone by doing a thing unnoticed; get an advantage over. * /The army stole a march on the enemy by marching at night and attacking them in the morning./ * /Jack got the job by getting up earlier than Bill. He stole a… …   Dictionary of American idioms

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