back to square one
English

Snakes send one back to square one
Etymology
Possibly from either of the children’s games hopscotch or snakes and ladders.[1][2]
Adjective
back to square one (not comparable)
- (idiomatic) Located back at the start, as after a dead-end or failure.
- After spending six hours on the intake we realized that there was nothing wrong with it, so we are back to square one.
- 1952 Edward Maurice Hugh-Jones, The Economic Journal, “The American Economy, 1860–1940. by A. J. Youngson Brown”, p. 411:
- Withal he has the problem of maintaining the interest of the reader who is always being sent back to square one in a sort of intellectual game of snakes and ladders.
Translations
located back at the start, as after a dead-end or failure
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Adverb
back to square one (not comparable)
- (idiomatic) Back to the start, as after a dead-end or failure.
- After spending six hours on the intake we realized that there was nothing wrong with it, so we went back to square one.
Translations
back to the start, as after a dead-end or failure
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See also
References
- ↑ “Extract revised for OED Online: square one”, in Oxford English Dictionary, January 2006, archived from the original on 16 March 2006.
- ↑ “Back to square one” in Gary Martin, The Phrase Finder, 1997–, retrieved 26 February 2017.
Further reading
-
back to square one (disambiguation) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
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