Advertisement
Advertisement
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
The playbook is clear, though it will take time, Gertz says.
One venture firm is applying that playbook to how it invests.
The change was a dramatic departure from the archetype of the all-powerful football coach, whose dominion extended from the playbook to high-school recruiting.
He turned upside-down the traditional playbook for solving international crises, in which diplomats work behind the scenes to iron out differences between warring parties, before world leaders swoop in and announce a deal.
The stunt was pulled off by activists aiming to save the reactor, taking a page from the antinuclear playbook of Greenpeace and other groups who long sought to close it.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse