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playbook

[ US /ˈpɫeɪbʊk/ ]
[ UK /plˈe‍ɪbʊk/ ]
NOUN
  1. a book containing the scripts of one or more dramatic plays
    the 1963 playbook leaves out the whole first scene
  2. a notebook containing descriptions and diagrams of the plays that a team has practiced (especially an American football team)
  3. a scheme or set of strategies for conducting a business campaign or a political campaign
    they borrowed a page from the playbook of the opposition

How To Use playbook In A Sentence

  • When they weren't lifting weights, they were buried in their playbooks, comparing notes on defensive adjustments and discussing what they'd like to do against certain looks this season.
  • It's as if defensive coordinators have wiggled out of straitjackets and finally can turn the pages of their playbooks again.
  • they borrowed a page from the playbook of the opposition
  • He also borrowed from the playbooks of Bill Clinton and British Prime Minister Tony Blair by marching his party to the center.
  • They're trying to portray them as a bunch of bigots, racists, and sexists—the same old playbook stuff.
  • Rookie quarterbacks deal with offensive playbooks that dwarf the ones they studied in college.
  • Hoover was a corporatist, an inflationist, and a statist who tried every policy in the interventionist playbook.
  • The majority of players - and I fall into this group - don't have that option when they turn in their playbooks.
  • That folks, is a tactic out of their playbook to try to divide us, if y'all haven't figured that one out yet. Anti-Deer-Hunting Billboard Goes Up in Kansas City
  • To Jonathan's credit, he's been able to 'industrialize' our strategies or playbooks to the point that they are presented in a format that provides ease of knowledge transfer from thought leaders and strategists that support him to buyers and managers in countries where IBM procures HR services," says Edward O'Donnell, global sourcing manager, IBM Integrated Supply Chain. Purchasing - Top Stories
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