give the game away , new to the game

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Ju

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I am trying to make sentences with give the game away and new to the game as follow.


1. May's colleagues look her down because she has just joined the company and she's new to the game.

2. Dave and Jo do not want to disclose an intimacy has grown between them to their friends, however, Jo's mum gave the game away.


Are my sentences OK?

Thank you.
 

Rover_KE

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They're OK with a few small changes:

1. May's colleagues look down on her because she has just joined the company and she's new to the game.

2. Dave and Jo do not want to disclose
their growing intimacy to their friends. However, Jo's mum gave the game away.

Rover
 

Barb_D

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Is "give the game away" a way to say "let the cat out of the bag"? It's not one I know.

I would have thought it meant "threw" the game - deliberately did something to cause a failure.
 

SoothingDave

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Is "give the game away" a way to say "let the cat out of the bag"? It's not one I know.

I would have thought it meant "threw" the game - deliberately did something to cause a failure.

I agree. I might say that she "gave it away" -- meaning that she revealed their secret.

I would use "gave the game away" literally to describe someone who made a mistake (fumbled the football, for example) and caused his team to lose. Not necessarily deliberately.
 

Barb_D

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I think it may need a "Chiefly British" citation, but it's Cambridge, so that may be implied.

Is this a commonly used expression?
 

Rover_KE

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Yes - it's very common.

We use 'throw the game' for the other meaning.

Rover
 

SoothingDave

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"Throwing a game" is deliberate. "Giving the game away" need not be.
 
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