turkey shoot

See also: turkey-shoot

English

Alternative forms

Pronunciation

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Noun

turkey shoot (plural turkey shoots)

  1. (chiefly US) A hunt or hunting competition, using rifles or shotguns, in which wild turkeys are the prey; a marksmanship contest in which a turkey is the prize.
    • 1913, B. M. Bower, chapter 3, in The Uphill Climb:
      Behind his barricade of barrels, Sam heard and shivered like a gun-shy collie at a turkey shoot.
    • 1919, William MacLeod Raine, chapter 3, in A Man Four-Square:
      [H]e had seen a thirteen-year-old boy named Jim Clanton win a turkey shoot against the best marksmen of the hill country.
    • 2009 February 25, “Boy held in Pa. killing to go to juvenile facility”, in USA Today, retrieved 16 July 2012:
      Debbie Houk said Jordan, a hunter, knew a lot about guns and was a good shot. On Valentine's Day, he beat out many older and more experienced hunters at a turkey shoot. "I'll never cook that turkey. It's the same gun that killed my daughter," she said.
  2. (idiomatic, by extension) A situation in which numerous weapons are discharged against prey, opponents, or victims who have little ability to protect or defend themselves.
    • 1960 July 11, “Aviation: The Embattled Farmer”, in Time:
      In the Battle of the Marianas, which pilots called "the turkey shoot," they downed 360 Japanese planes in a single day, the record bag of the war.
    • 1991 April 14, Leslie H. Gelb, “Foreign Affairs: White House Guilt?”, in New York Times, retrieved 16 July 2012:
      Almost everyone argued that it would be inhumane for Americans to engage in a turkey shoot against fleeing Iraqi soldiers.
    • 2009 Nov. 15, Mike Higgins, "Andrew Marr: The Making of Modern Britain, BBC2 (TV review)," The Independent (UK) (retrieved 16 July 2012):
      The U-boats, for instance, had a stranglehold on the merchant shipping supplying Britain, and it was thought that a convoy system would turn into a turkey shoot.
  3. (idiomatic, by extension) An unequal competitive situation in which one party easily defeats the other(s).
    • 1968 November 17, Bob Monahan, “Delaware Thrashes B.U. 41-13”, in Boston Globe, retrieved 16 July 2012, page 71:
      The University of Delaware Blue Hens had themselves a turkey shoot here Saturday at Delaware Stadium as they humbled Boston University, 41-13, before 10,350.
    • 2011 June 28, Chris McGrath, Tennis: ‘Devastated’ Williams sisters rue double loss," The Independent (UK) (retrieved 16 July 2012):
      Their exit from the tournament, without a set between them yesterday, at least demonstrated that the women's game is not quite the turkey shoot it might have seemed.

See also

References

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