mulligan

noun

mul·​li·​gan ˈmə-li-gən How to pronounce mulligan (audio)
: a free shot sometimes given a golfer in informal play when the previous shot was poorly played

Examples of mulligan in a Sentence

Recent Examples on the Web
Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to show current usage. Read More Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.
Of course, the new CFP allows more mulligans than teams got in the past. Matt Brown, The Athletic, 12 Aug. 2024 The Federal Reserve's half-point interest rate cut yesterday was a monetary policy mulligan, an extra golf swing when the first one didn't go quite the way the swinger intended. Courtenay Brown, Axios, 19 Sep. 2024 The world has changed overnight, and Trump is going to need a mulligan. Dana Milbank, Washington Post, 26 July 2024 Perhaps no former first-rounder needs a mulligan after last season more than Johnston, the No. 21 pick who was plagued by a series of costly drops. Jim Reineking, USA TODAY, 15 July 2024 See all Example Sentences for mulligan 

Word History

Etymology

probably from the name Mulligan

Note: Probably the individual most widely credited as the eponymous initiator of mulligan is David B. Mulligan (1869-1954), a Canadian hotelier and amateur golfer. The coinage is alleged to have taken place while Mulligan was playing at either the Winged Foot Golf Club in Mamaroneck, New York, in the 1930's or at the Country Club of Montreal in Saint-Lambert, Quebec, in the 1920's; for reasons varying according to the account, Mulligan gave himself, or was given, an extra chance when a group began play, which he dubbed a "mulligan." According to another story the source was John A. "Buddy" Mulligan, an attendant at the Essex Fells Country Club in New Jersey in the 1930's, who, when he was called away from his duties to make up a golf foursome, was given an extra chance at the first tee to make up for his lack of practice. Origin in the mid-1930's is not possible, however, as a citation of the word has turned up from the Detroit Free Press, October 13, 1931 (p. 16): "All were waiting to see what Byrd would do on the 290-yard 18th, with a creek in front of the well-elevated green. His first drive barely missed carrying the creek, and he was given a 'mulligan' just for fun." The author of the piece did not feel compelled to explain mulligan, implying that the word had already been in circulation for a while. The "Byrd" in the quote is Sammy Byrd, a major-league baseball player who was also a serious golfer. His involvement has led the blogger Peter Jensen Brown to speculate that mulligan may have a baseball connection. Swat Mulligan (originally Milligan) was a fictional ballplayer introduced in the New York Evening World about 1908 as a paragon of hitting power; his name became a byword for a powerful hitter ("[Woody Platt], a newcomer to tournament golf, failed to get his strokes working in good shape against the long hitting Herron, who is a real Swat Mulligan of the links."— The Evening World, August 22, 1919, p. 2). Brown also cites a peculiar use of mulligan, apparently not attested elsewhere, in the context of cricket: "If it is a bad ball, 'off the wicket,' he may take a 'mulligan' at it and knock it over the fence, 'out of bounds' they call it." (Colorado Springs Gazette, April 19, 1919, p. 12). Given the semantic distance between mulligan as an exemplification of strength and as a free shot in golf, a link between the two seems tenuous. For a detailed discussion with full references to sources see Peter Jensen Brown's "Hey Mulligan Man! - a Second Shot at the History of Taking a 'Mulligan'" at his Early Sports and Pop Culture History Blog, May 8, 2017.

First Known Use

1931, in the meaning defined above

Time Traveler
The first known use of mulligan was in 1931

Dictionary Entries Near mulligan

Cite this Entry

“Mulligan.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/mulligan. Accessed 23 Nov. 2024.

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