tailgate
See also: Tailgate
English

A pickup truck with an open tailgate (1).

The tailgates (3) of Camden Lock are in the foreground.

“No tailgating” sign (verb, sense 2).
Noun
tailgate (plural tailgates)
Derived terms
Translations
hinged board or hatch at the rear of a vehicle
|
either of the downstream gates in a canal lock
tailgate party — see tailgate party
Verb
tailgate (third-person singular simple present tailgates, present participle tailgating, simple past and past participle tailgated)
- (automotive, intransitive, transitive) To drive dangerously close behind another vehicle.
- That idiot has been tailgating me for the last five minutes.
- To follow another person through access control on their access, rather than on one’s own credentials, especially when entering a door controlled by a card reader.
- (finance, of a broker) To privately purchase or sell a security immediately after trading in the same security for a client.
- Coordinate term: front run
- (US, intransitive) To have a tailgate party.
- 2013 September 29, Ken Belson, “The Tailgate Experience, British Style”, in The New York Times, ISSN 0362-4331:
- The point, Goldstein discovered through a lot of long days hanging out in parking lots, is that tailgating — the gustatory madness, the multigenerational camaraderie, the decked-out vans — is as essential a part of football as the game itself.
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Derived terms
Translations
drive dangerously close behind another vehicle
|
to follow another person through access control on their access, rather than on one’s own credentials, especially when entering a door controlled by a card reader
|
See also
Further reading
tailgate on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
piggybacking (security) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
tailgating on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
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