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Definition 2024


knee-deep_in_the_Big_Muddy

knee-deep in the Big Muddy

English

Alternative forms

Adjective

knee-deep in the Big Muddy

  1. (chiefly US, idiomatic) Stuck in a predicament; mired in a difficult situation, especially one resulting from poor judgment or bad leadership.
    • 1994, Cal Thomas, "Clinton should heed Gore advice," New York Daily News, 16 Sept. (retrieved 4 Jan. 2010):
      Polls show three-quarters of the people don't want us to invade Haiti. Nonetheless, it appears we're about to go knee-deep in the Big Muddy.
    • 2002, Edward Iwata, "Enron faces 'hornet's nest' of charges," USA Today, 16 July (retrieved 4 Jan. 2010):
      The 40-year-old Fastow, a hot-tempered financial whiz, engineered the controversial partnerships that led to Enron's meltdown. . . . "He's knee-deep in the big muddy," Meagher says.
    • 2007, Janice Langan-Fox et al., Research Companion to the Dysfunctional Workplace, ISBN 9781845429324, p. 142:
      In the classic ‘knee deep in the Big Muddy’ scenario (Staw, 1976), individuals continue to contribute to a losing cause long after it is clear that this is a tremendous waste of money.

Synonyms