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Definition 2024


willow_in_the_wind

willow in the wind

English

Noun

willow in the wind (plural willows in the wind)

  1. (idiomatic) One whose views are easily and regularly changed by the persuasion or influence of others.
    • 1984 March 22, "Editorial: Smoking ban still up in the air," Reading Eagle (USA), p. 4 (retrieved 21 June 2011):
      [T]he CAB has rightfully seen Congress as a willow in the wind, bending to the wishes of whatever special interest groups and businesses speak loudest.
    • 1989, Gerry Spence, With Justice for None, ISBN 9780812916966, p. 5:
      Justice is not a willow in the wind; justice stands immutable against unjust forces.
    • 1992 June 25, "Local: Florida Senate," Miami Herald, p. 5B (retrieved 21 June 2011):
      If he has to vote against taxes, he will—and his vote won't change from day to day: “I'm not gonna be a willow in the wind.”
    • 2008, Ronald Arthur Howard and Clinton D. Korver, Ethics for the Real World, ISBN 9781422121061, p. 40:
      Ethics begin to feel situational, a balancing of concerns. When this happens, we no longer have any firm ethic to stand on. We become an ethical willow in the wind.

Synonyms