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around the corner
Very soon, imminent, as in You never know what stroke of luck lies just around the corner . [First half of 1900s]
On the other side of a street corner, as in The doctor's office is around the corner from our house . [First half of 1800s]
Nearby, a short distance away, as in The nearest grocery store is just around the corner . [Early 1800s]
Example Sentences
“Investors don’t know what’s going to happen around the corner,†said Dan Ives, a Wedbush Securities analyst who covers the technology sector.
Good Neighbor Bar — near Crosby Street and Lincoln Avenue, around the corner from Gill’s house — opened 21 days after the fire.
Around the corner, on Crosby Street, the people with RVs have been happy — if, initially, a bit startled — to see nearby restaurants, a supermarket and a gym bustling.
But all this underlines that uncertainty is the new certainty and considerable bandwidth is absorbed within government anticipating what might be around the corner and then seeking to negotiate about and/or mitigate the consequences of whatever is expected to change.
The Treasury has signalled there would be no more tax rises and no more increases in government spending, with the message accompanying the government's approach that the world has changed, and nobody knows what is around the corner.
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