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This humble mode of transportation has become an unstoppable serial killer this presidential season, metaphorically speaking. Hardly a week goes by without someone reviving the cliche of the 2008 campaign – that a former ally of a candidate has been thrown under a
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phrase in
English meaning to blame or abandon a person for selfish reasons. It is typically used to describe a disavowal of a previously amicable relationship to avoid being associated with something controversial or embarrassing.
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season. It has frequently been used to describe various politicians distancing themselves from suddenly unpopular or controversial figures with whom the candidate has previously allied themselves.
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It is possible that the expression "throw/push/shove someone under the bus" came from
Britain in the late 1970s or early 1980s. The earliest known usage of this phrase was 21 June 1982, when
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noted that the expression "has appeared in more than 400 press stories on the campaign over the last six months".
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in an article about Lauper, but they are not attributed in the article to her or anyone else.
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had pushed her under the bus which the gossips had said was the only means of her removal."
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in 1984: "In the rock 'n' roll business, you are either on the bus or under it. Playing '
352:(September 7, 1984). "Pensive, with Orange Hair Cyndi Lauper & Her Tunes on Tour".
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272:(December 12, 1991). "Hood talks without thinking, friends testify at murder trial".
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After Julian
Critchley, a relatively early use is attributed by the website
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is under the bus." However, those lines were written by journalist
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The phrase was picked up by the US media during the 2008
210:"The Origins Of 'Throw Him (Or Her) Under The Bus'"
90:' with Eddie and the Condos in a buffet bar in
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472:Political terminology of the United States
227:"Why Do We 'Throw Someone Under the Bus'?"
80:is sometimes wrongly quoted as saying in
371:"Time to Hit The Brakes On That Cliche"
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405:"Primaries Toss Some 'Under the Bus'"
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102:Use in 2008 US political discourse
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244:"throw (someone) under the bus"
369:Segal, David (April 2, 2008).
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442:The dictionary definition of
32:throw (someone) under the bus
184:"Throw under the bus origin"
299:The New York Times Magazine
27:Idiomatic phrase in English
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57:(London) wrote "President
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68:to a 1991 article in the
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120:, calls the expression "
229:Merriam-Webster website
292:(November 19, 2006).
135:report, the linguist
216:. November 11, 2019.
18:Thrown under the bus
445:throw under the bus
376:The Washington Post
355:The Washington Post
242:(October 2, 2006).
164:Throw to the wolves
131:". In a March 2008
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83:The Washington Post
322:(March 19, 2002).
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324:"'Under the Bus'"
275:Gazette Telegraph
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294:"Netroots"
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36:idiomatic
329:Newsweek
194:16 March
154:Fall guy
149:Betrayal
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