mano a mano

See also: mano-a-mano

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

Borrowed from Spanish mano a mano (literally hand-to-hand); on equal footing, neither of two participants having any distinct advantage.

Noun

mano a mano

  1. A head-on conflict or direct competition; a duel.
    The public debate became a heated mano a mano between the two leading candidates.

Translations

Adjective

mano a mano (not comparable)

  1. In close confrontation.
    We sat tensely in the courtroom while the mano-a-mano struggle ensued between the two skilled lawyers.
    • 2016 May 23, Ignatiy Vishnevetsky, “Apocalypse pits the strengths of the X-Men series against the weaknesses”, in The Onion AV Club:
      When he finally goes mano a mano with Xavier at the climax, it’s in a psychic battle staged inside the latter’s dreamspace, which happens to look exactly like his mansion

Adverb

mano a mano (not comparable)

  1. Characterized by head-to-head competition or conflict.
    The newcomer brashly engaged the veteran player mano a mano.

Portuguese

Etymology

Noun

mano a mano m (plural mano a manos)

  1. mano a mano (a head-on conflict or direct competition)

Adverb

mano a mano (not comparable)

  1. mano a mano (by means of a head-to-head competition)

Spanish

Adjective

mano a mano (invariable)

  1. hand to hand (competition), or sometimes hand in hand (cooperation); on equal terms, close together.

Noun

mano a mano m (plural mano a mano)

  1. A corrida in which two rival matadors alternate in fighting several bulls each.
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