luck of the draw
English
Etymology
An allusion to the random manner in which objects (such as playing cards, straws, or marbles) are distributed, drawn, or withdrawn (from a card deck, bag, or other container) in many games of chance (such as card games).
Pronunciation
Audio (General Australian): (file)
Noun
luck of the draw (uncountable)
- (idiomatic) The random production or occurrence of favorable or unfavorable results.
- Synonyms: chance, happenstance, fortuity
- She got a big winner [ticket for a large prize]. It was the luck of the draw!
- She got a real dud. Well, that's the luck of the draw for you.
- 1973, Sheila Sutcliffe, Martello Towers, →ISBN, page 63:
- [A] dry ditch or moat . . . should have been constructed around towers in particularly exposed or vulnerable positions but in some cases it seems that they were selected by the luck of the draw.
- 1996 May 21, Carey Goldberg, “Best-Selling Author, but Not at Home”, in New York Times, retrieved 8 June 2013:
- [I]s it merely the luck of the draw that turns some novels into blockbusters and others of equal merit into also-rans?
- 2005 August 10, “What You Need to Know on Smoking and Lung Cancer”, in Time:
- If you've never been a smoker and you develop lung cancer, how did you get it? Is it genetics, environment, radon, luck of the draw?
Related terms
References
- “luck of the draw”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.