is off to a shameless start

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GoodTaste

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Does "is off to a shameless start" mean "is crazy as to have had a shameless start"?

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McEnany is off to a shameless start at Trump's White House, but she's better than nothing
White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany is dishonoring her position. But her press briefings establish a record on which to judge Donald Trump.

-from USAToday
https://www.usatoday.com/story/opin...e-claims-trump-white-house-column/3090674001/
 

emsr2d2

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No. When we say something is "off to a/an [adjective] start", we simply means it's started in that particular way.

He's off to a good start = He's started well.
He's off to a bad start = He's started badly.

Something McEnany did right at the beginning indicated to the writer that she is shameless.
 

Charlie Bernstein

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No. When we say something is "off to a/an [adjective] start", we simply means it's started in that particular way.

He's off to a good start = He's started well.
He's off to a bad start = He's started badly.

Something McEnany did right at the beginning indicated to the writer that she is shameless.
And "right at the beginning" means "at the very beginning" — not "correctly at the beginning."

(I misread it at first.)
 

emsr2d2

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And "right at the beginning" means "at the very beginning" — not "correctly at the beginning."

(I misread it at first.)

Apologies to anyone else who misread it. I'm so used to using "right at the start/right at the end/right in the middle/right on time" etc that I just overlooked the fact that "right" could be read to mean "correct". Generally, on this forum, I use "correct" rather than "right" for that very reason.
 

Tdol

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And better than nothing contrasts her with the previous White House Press Secretary who didn't do such briefings.
 
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