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take a back seat

Idioms  
  1. Occupy an inferior position; allow another to be in control. For example, Linda was content to take a back seat and let Nancy run the meeting. This idiom uses back seat in contrast to the driver's seat, that is, the one in control. [Mid-1800s]


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

But analysts say if instability persists in the Middle East, that concern could take a back seat to China ensuring it can secure all the gas it needs.

From The Wall Street Journal • Mar. 10, 2026

Car sales might take a back seat to artificial intelligence on the earnings conference call, however.

From Barron's • Oct. 20, 2025

And do the most obvious mechanisms for lessening screen time—putting your phone away, acting like an actual human being sometimes, or taking a walk outside—really need to take a back seat to industry?

From Slate • Sep. 5, 2025

As age has hit, he's had to take a back seat to the more recent crop of achievers - Liel Abada, Jota, Daizen Maeda, Nicolas Gerrit-Kuhn.

From BBC • May 17, 2025

What, I'm supposed to take a back seat to some punk kid who didn't even really want in?

From "How It Went Down" by Kekla Magoon

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