on the ball, be



on the ball, be

Also, have something on the ball. Be especially capable or efficient, as in These programmers really have a lot on the ball. This term originated in baseball, where it was used for throwing a pitch with exceptional speed, spin, or some other deceptive motion. [Slang; early 1900s]
See also: on

Common Names:

NameGenderPronouncedUsage
JaynaJAY-nəEnglish (Rare)
Josse-French (Rare), Medieval French
BasBAHSDutch
Alessaah-LES-sahItalian
Dmitar-Croatian, Serbian
Bronislavabrah-nee-SLAH-vah (Russian)Czech, Slovak, Russian