Alibi Ike

English

Etymology

From the principal character in "Alibi Ike" (1915), a short story by Ring Lardner Sr., and a subsequent film (1935) of the same name.

Noun

Alibi Ike (plural Alibi Ikes)

  1. (informal) One who is always ready to provide excuses for shortcomings, errors, or other difficulties.
    • 1992, Hanoch Teller, Give Peace a Chance, →ISBN, p. 83 (Google preview):
      But Rafi poured ice water on my enthusiasm: the staff wouldn't agree, the labor union would give us trouble, Harris would back down and we'd be stuck with a huge inventory. He had more excuses than Alibi Ike.
    • 2002, Jerome Alexander, 160 Degrees of Deviation: The Case for the Corporate Cynic, →ISBN, p. 28 (Google preview):
      Many times I have heard the "alibi Ike's" and apologists brush off complaints and ignore behaviors because the deviator in question is too critical, too important, too tenured, or too something!
    • 2010, Frank Deford, Bliss, Remembered: A Novel, →ISBN, (Google preview):
      Now, I'm no Alibi Ike, Teddy, but I think that was my downfall.
    • 2014 June 6, HarryRPitts, comment on "Benghazi, Bowe Bergdahl, and manufactured brouhaha" by Andrew Bacevich, Boston Globe (retrieved 10 July 2014):
      There's no foulup so lame that keepers of the flame like Andrew Bacevich, the modern Alibi Ike, can't excuse, spin and downplay.

Synonyms

See also

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.