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    Steal a march on
    • gain an advantage over (someone) by acting before they do

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  2. If you steal a march on someone, you get an advantage over that person by acting before they do: Our rival company managed to steal a march on us by bringing out their software ahead of ours. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases

  3. STEAL A MARCH definition: to do something before someone else and so gain an advantage over them | Meaning, pronunciation, translations and examples.

  4. steal a march on. : to gain an advantage on unobserved. steal one's thunder. : to grab attention from another especially by anticipating an idea, plan, or presentation. also: to claim credit for another's idea.

  5. To gain an unexpected or surreptitious advantage over someone or something, as by accomplishing something before, or better than, someone else. The retail business managed to steal a march on its competitors by signing an exclusive export agreement with Europe.

  6. Gain an advantage over unexpectedly or secretly, as in Macy's stole a march on their rival department store with their Thanksgiving Day parade . This metaphoric expression comes from medieval warfare, where a march was the distance an army could travel in a day.

  7. If you steal a march on someone, you start doing something before they do it in order to gain an advantage over them. If its strategy succeeds, Mexico could even steal a march on its northern neighbour.

  8. steal a march on somebody meaning, definition, what is steal a march on somebody: to gain an advantage over someone by doi...: Learn more.

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