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1 Post By Gillnetter -
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2 Post By Raymott
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Lean in to / Lean back
All the hype around an upcoming book by Facebook's COO on women and work, titled "Lean ln", made me wonder about the exact meaning of the phrases "Lean ln" and "Lean back".
One of the reviews includes an explanation: "The title comes from her advice ... for women to lean in to their work rather than lean back, as many tend to do for a variety of reasons at key points in their careers."
I get the general idea, but not clearly enough. Is this a metaphor? An image of someone leaning forward or backward I should have in my mind? Are these expressions with a known meaning that would be clear to native English speakers?
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Re: Lean in to / Lean back

Originally Posted by
okok
All the hype around an upcoming book by Facebook's COO on women and work, titled "Lean ln", made me wonder about the exact meaning of the phrases "Lean ln" and "Lean back".
One of the reviews includes an explanation: "The title comes from her advice ... for women to lean in to their work rather than lean back, as many tend to do for a variety of reasons at key points in their careers."
I get the general idea, but not clearly enough. Is this a metaphor? An image of someone leaning forward or backward I should have in my mind? Are these expressions with a known meaning that would be clear to native English speakers?
I've never met with them.
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Re: Lean in to / Lean back

Originally Posted by
okok
All the hype around an upcoming book by Facebook's COO on women and work, titled "Lean ln", made me wonder about the exact meaning of the phrases "Lean ln" and "Lean back".
One of the reviews includes an explanation: "The title comes from her advice ... for women to lean in to their work rather than lean back, as many tend to do for a variety of reasons at key points in their careers."
I get the general idea, but not clearly enough. Is this a metaphor? An image of someone leaning forward or backward I should have in my mind? Are these expressions with a known meaning that would be clear to native English speakers?
If you lean into something you go toward it. A person can lean into their work (become very active in their work) as a person can lean into the engine of an automobile (bend forward toward the engine). If you lean back from something, you go away from it.
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Re: Lean in to / Lean back
Thanks. Is this expression an original coinage of the author, or something that has been used before?
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Re: Lean in to / Lean back

Originally Posted by
okok
Thanks. Is this expression an original coinage of the author, or something that has been used before?
It's fairly common where I live.
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Re: Lean in to / Lean back

Originally Posted by
Gillnetter
It's fairly common where I live.
I have no argument with that.
I just have to say that I (a speaker of old-fashioned BrE) understood neither 'lean in' nor 'lean back' in those sentences.
Context is important. Please provide enough for us to be able to deal effectively with your question.
Your thread title should include all or part of the word/phrase being discussed.
If you just want to know the meaning of a word, try OneLook Dictionary Search first.
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Re: Lean in to / Lean back
As a speaker of AusE, I'd have to admit that, while not knowing those terms, I would make of them what Gil said.
But I'd question whether some women - such as SCUBA divers, sword swallowers, waltz dancers - really should be leaning forwards into their work rather than backwards.
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Re: Lean in to / Lean back

Originally Posted by
Raymott
As a speaker of
AusE, I'd have to admit that, while not knowing those terms, I would make of them what Gil said.
But I'd question whether some women - such as SCUBA divers, sword swallowers, waltz dancers - really should be leaning forwards into their work rather than backwards.

Thanks for all the answers.
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