sharp practice
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English
[edit]Noun
[edit]sharp practice (countable and uncountable, plural sharp practices)
- Commercial activity that is possibly dishonest while not actually being illegal.
- The typical political sharp practice of manipulating history to suit the current agenda.
- 1946 May and June, J. G. Holmes, “The North Woolwich Branch”, in Railway Magazine, page 174:
- This action was later regarded by some as a piece of rather sharp practice, but Bidder claimed that the landowners concerned […] refused to sell the ground for the railway unless the whole of their property was purchased at a suitable profit to themselves.
- 2007 August 29, letters to the editor, “More reports from the check-in desk”, in The Guardian,
- If this is not actually illegal, it certainly appears to be a sharp practice.
- (law) A lawyer's unfairly taking advantage of an opposing party's missteps or inexperience to gain an advantage.