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  1. If you are thrown in at the deep end, you are put in a completely new situation without any help or preparation. If you jump in at the deep end, you go into a completely new situation without any help or preparation.

    • Variants
    • Meaning
    • Example Sentences
    • Origin
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    thrownin at the deep end
    jumpin at the deep end
    divein at the deep end
    to start a new job or activity without being prepared for it
    to be given a challenging task without enough preparation
    to start doing something new and challenging without assistance, guidance or preparation
    to put in a completely new situation when one is not fully ready or prepared to do it
    Soldiers are thrown in the deep endwhen they have just joined the army.
    She was never afraid to jump in at the deep endand start her new business alone.
    Harry was thrown in the deep endwhen he had to arrange the dinner alone.
    He is jumping in at the deep end, acting as strike bowler in his first match this year on the Australian pitches.

    The idiom was originated from the “uneven depth” in the swimming pool, which is shallow at one side for learners and has a deeper section made for more expert swimmers. It relates to jumping (or diving) into the deep end of a swimming pool. In the deep end of the pool, one cannot stand on the bottom, so they are forced to swim. It’s a metaphor for ...

    Learn the meaning and origin of the idiom "in at the deep end", which means to start something new and challenging without enough preparation. See how to use it in sentences and compare it with similar idioms.

  2. 1. Literally, in a deep part of a pool or other body of water. The kids were in at the deep end of the pool when Timmy started having trouble staying afloat. 2. In a particularly troublesome, difficult, or dangerous situation, especially one from which it is difficult to extract oneself.

  3. idiom (also throw someone in at the deep end) Add to word list. C2. If you jump or are thrown in at the deep end, you start doing something new and difficult without help or preparation. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Taking part and getting involved. actor. all in. along. attendee. be (a) party to something idiom. concern. engage.

  4. Learn the meaning of this idiom, which means to make someone start a new and difficult job or activity without helping them or preparing them for it. See examples, translations and related expressions.

  5. A deliciously disarming debut novel about a twenty-something Londoner who discovers that she may have been looking for love -- and pleasure -- in all...

  6. Buy In at the Deep End: Winner of the Polari Book Prize 2020 by Davies, Kate from Amazon's Fiction Books Store. Everyday low prices on a huge range of new releases and classic fiction.

    • Kate Davies