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playbook
[pley-book]
noun
(in Elizabethan drama) the script of a play, used by the actors as an acting text.
Football., a notebook containing descriptions of all the plays and strategies used by a team, often accompanied by diagrams, issued to players for them to study and memorize before the season begins.
Informal., any plan or set of strategies, as for outlining a campaign in business or politics.
playbook
/ ˈpleɪˌbʊk /
noun
a book containing a range of possible set plays
a notional range of possible tactics in any sphere of activity
Example Sentences
And the old political playbook — confession, contrition, capitulation — is obviously no longer operative, as candidates find it not only possible but even advantageous to brazen their way through storms of uproar and opprobrium.
In American politics, that represented a fresh playbook.
Borrowing a page from London's playbook, authorities have also decided to split the municipal corporation into five smaller bodies and set up an overarching Greater Bengaluru Authority.
But you can also borrow a page from the “yes, and” playbook to redirect their energy with grace.
Tourism is just one part of China's alleged playbook.
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