backbencher
nounEtymology
Definitions
A Member of Parliament who does not have cabinet rank, and who therefore sits on one of…
A Member of Parliament who does not have cabinet rank, and who therefore sits on one of the backbenches or in one of the back rows of the legislature.
A student who does not perform well, especially one who sits at the back of the classroom.
- Classmates naturally turn to look at the backbencher, who must acknowledge his presence, with some embarrassment.
- The teacher also gets an idea of the "backbenchers" or the slow students since he can see which desk is still to send an answer.
- When I was in a primary school, I was a backbencher student.
A member of a team who does not usually play, but who is held in reserve.
- During 1994, the national team players were away for a game in January and again during the season-ending league championship tournament in April. The “backbenchers” won all these games.
- The plucky backbencher began his life in hockey as a player, breaking into the professional game with the Pacific Coast Hockey Association's Portland Rosebuds in 1916– 17, but turned amateur again the following season.
- By the second scrimmage of the season he was a backbencher, suspended from the game for disciplinary reasons.
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Someone who does not play an active role in a process.
- As we stated in previous chapters, counselors and other student support personnel have been backbenchers in the ongoing drama of school reform.
- Mayorga was no backbencher in the dirty war. He had been chief of the naval base in Trelew in 1972, when one of the first massacres took place.
- But, Jack was a backbencher in the committee. His main function was to keep an eye on the theatre's income.
The neighborhood
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for backbencher. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA