mulligan

listen to the pronunciation of mulligan
Englisch - Türkisch
yahni
güveç
mulligan stew
Mulligan güveç
Englisch - Englisch
An unpenalized chance to re-take a stroke that went awry

If you lose your drive in the water, take a mulligan and try again.

Mulligan stew
A unit of measure equal to 62.5 milliliters, or 2.5 shots, of alcohol

Tom couldn't handle the shot of tequila, so he had to do a mulligan of port.

A second chance

Don't do poorly in your first interview; you won't get a mulligan.

(aka: "lunch ball", "Sunday ball", "do-over") taking a second attempt at a shot when one doesn't like the result of the first Example: "Taking a Mulligan is not allowed in the rules of golf, but is usually tolerated (only if time allows) in casual play "
When a player is allowed to reply any one shot pre hole
A second shot permitted without penalty Usually only one is allowed per round and is limited to tee shots although the number can be agreed upon by players before the round begins
Irish version of burgoo
{i} stew with meat and vegetables, Mulligan's stew (Slang); (Golf) extra shot taken in place of a poorly executed shot (only allowed in an unofficial game)
In golf, a shot not tallied against the score, granted in informal play after a poor shot especially from the tee In general, a situation where you make a mistake and your opponent allows you to correct the mistake
A unit of measure equal to 62.5 milliliters, or 2.5 shots, of alcohol. So named because it is the cost of being allowed a do-over in drinking games
A practice shot sometimes mistaken name for as provisional ball
A take-over shot N
(also "lunch ball, sunday ball") taking a second attempt (replay, "do over") at a shot when one doesn't like the result of the first Example: Taking a Mulligan is not allowed in the rules of golf, but is usually tolerated (only if time allows) in casual play
mulligan stew
A stew made of whatever ingredients are handy and appropriate for stew, rather than of specific ingredients
mulligan stews
plural form of mulligan stew
mulligan stew
Irish version of burgoo
mulligan stew
A stew made of bits of various meats and vegetables
Gerry Mulligan
orig. Gerald Joseph Mulligan born April 6, 1927, Queens Village, Long Island, N.Y., U.S. died Jan. 20, 1996, Darien, Conn. U.S. jazz saxophonist, pianist, composer, arranger, and bandleader. He worked as staff arranger for Gene Krupa's band in 1946, later writing arrangements and playing for the Miles Davis nonet's Birth of the Cool recordings (1949). Mulligan became one of the best-known exponents of cool jazz (see bebop). In 1952 he formed a pianoless quartet featuring trumpeter Chet Baker
mulligan
Favoriten