whole new ballgame, a



whole new ballgame, a

A completely altered situation, as in It will take a year to reassign the staff, and by then some will have quit and we'll have a whole new ballgame . This expression comes from baseball, where it signifies a complete turn of events, as when the team that was ahead falls behind. [Colloquial; 1960s]
See also: new, whole

Common Names:

NameGenderPronouncedUsage
ÉAbhaAY-vaIrish
GonÇAlogoon-SA-looPortuguese
Longinus-Ancient Roman
Miquel-Catalan
Harper['hɑ:pə]
MiloŠ-Czech, Slovak, Serbian, Slovene, Croatian, Macedonian