tailgate
See also: Tailgate
English
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A pickup truck with an open tailgate (1).
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The tailgates (3) of Camden Lock are in the foreground.
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“No tailgating” sign (verb, sense 2).
Alternative forms
- tail-gate, tail gate
Noun
tailgate (plural tailgates)
- (automotive) A hinged board or hatch at the rear of a vehicle that can be lowered for loading and unloading.
- Synonym: tailboard
- (British) The hinged rear door of a hatchback.
- Either of the downstream gates in a canal lock.
- (Can we add an example for this sense?)
- (US) Ellipsis of tailgate party.
- 2013 November 8, Nancy M. Better, “Tailgating Gets Online Playbooks”, in The New York Times, →ISSN:
- The website was created by Harry St. John, a former college athlete who wanted to take the agony out of managing tailgates.
Coordinate terms
Derived terms
Translations
hinged board or hatch at the rear of a vehicle
|
either of the downstream gates in a canal lock
tailgate party — see tailgate party
Verb
tailgate (third-person singular simple present tailgates, present participle tailgating, simple past and past participle tailgated)
- (automotive, intransitive, transitive) To drive dangerously close behind another vehicle.
- That idiot has been tailgating me for the last five minutes.
- To follow another person through access control on their access, rather than on one’s own credentials, especially when entering a door controlled by a card reader.
- (finance, of a broker) To privately purchase or sell a security immediately after trading in the same security for a client.
- Coordinate term: front run
- (US, intransitive) To have a tailgate party.
- 2013 September 29, Ken Belson, “The Tailgate Experience, British Style”, in The New York Times, →ISSN:
- The point, Goldstein discovered through a lot of long days hanging out in parking lots, is that tailgating — the gustatory madness, the multigenerational camaraderie, the decked-out vans — is as essential a part of football as the game itself.
Derived terms
Translations
drive dangerously close behind another vehicle
|
to follow another person through access control on their access, rather than on one’s own credentials, especially when entering a door controlled by a card reader
|
See also
Further reading
tailgate on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
piggybacking (security) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
tailgating on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
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