noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a chance/opportunity to express sth
▪ The debate will give MPs an opportunity to express their views in detail.
accept an opportunity
▪ I wish that I’d accepted the opportunity to retire when it was offered.
afford (sb) an opportunity/chance
▪ It afforded her the opportunity to improve her tennis skills.
ample time/evidence/opportunity
▪ You’ll have ample time for questions later.
▪ There is ample evidence that climate patterns are changing.
an exciting opportunity
▪ The job offers an exciting career opportunity for the right individual.
an investment opportunity
▪ She took advantage of a unique investment opportunity.
be glad of an opportunity/chance/excuse to do sth
▪ They were glad of the chance to finally get some sleep.
career opportunities
▪ Students often know little about the career opportunities available to them.
employment opportunities (=jobs that are available for people to apply for)
▪ There are very few employment opportunities in the area.
equal opportunities
▪ The government must make sure that all children have equal opportunities in education.
equality of opportunityformal
▪ The government must ensure equality of opportunity for all children.
grabbed...opportunity
▪ She grabbed the opportunity to go to America.
ideal opportunity
▪ The scheme offers an ideal opportunity for youngsters to get training.
lose a chance/opportunity
▪ If you hesitate, you may lose the opportunity to compete altogether.
maximize opportunities/chances etc
▪ The career center will help you maximize your opportunities.
offer an opportunity/chance/possibility
▪ The course offers the opportunity to specialize in the final year.
opportunity...too good to miss
▪ The opportunity was too good to miss so we left immediately.
pass up a chance/opportunity/offer
▪ I don’t think you should pass up the opportunity to go to university.
photo opportunity
relish the chance/opportunity
▪ He relishes the chance to play Hamlet.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
ample
▪ In other words, we must motivate our learner to think, and give her ample opportunity to do so.
▪ We felt we had ample opportunities to express our differences through discreet channels.
▪ In fact there was ample opportunity to achieve this objective.
▪ You can re- create a rundown play involving four different defensive players and still have ample opportunity to observe the next pitch.
▪ Conflict: there is ample opportunity for this information to be acquired and used by other divisions within the conglomerate.
▪ We gave him ample opportunity to leave with class and style, reputation intact.
▪ In the nursery class, a semi-structured interview schedule was used, with ample opportunity for expanding answers.
▪ This provides the reader or reviewer ample opportunity to write notes in regard to your material.
early
▪ Fighting against threats to young children's rights to early childhood opportunities could be seen as an expression of legitimate collective responsibility.
▪ But I will, at my earliest opportunity, pursue the dastardly suspicions raised by these most unexpected and perhaps revealing clues.
▪ If you are wrongfully dismissed, you should therefore seek alternative employment at the earliest opportunity.
▪ That is what we intend to do when we remove the Government from office at the earliest opportunity.
▪ It should be noted that this type of shelf should be replaced with something more suitable at the earliest opportunity.
▪ As he had done in Pretoria Braam Van Straaten easily landed two of his three early opportunities.
▪ I asked for that to be done at the earliest opportunity, the following morning at 9 o'clock.
▪ Having searched this field to the best of my ability I left with the intention to return at the earliest opportunity.
economic
▪ Some of them, like some Karavas, seized available economic opportunities and joined the new élite.
▪ I imagine for better economic opportunity.
▪ A very high proportion of prisoners come from a background of grossly limited educational and economic opportunity.
▪ He also reckons the economic opportunities aren't fantastic for Internet companies any more.
educational
▪ Second, general educational opportunities are under threat.
▪ Crystal has had steady, stable personal relationships, family support, the benefits of first-rate community programs, and educational opportunities.
▪ There were tasks for everyone which took account of intelligence, educational opportunities and personal gifts.
▪ But, little by little, educational opportunities began to be foreclosed for girls.
▪ The famous Education Act of 1944 extended educational opportunity but did little to alter the nature of it.
▪ Women are discriminated against in employment and educational opportunities and suffer from pervasive cultural and traditional biases and prejudices.
▪ Like Dorothy Heathcote, he is interested in giving children an educational opportunity.
▪ They saw in educational television the opportunity to get a jump start on quality education at comparatively low cost.
equal
▪ These will cover areas such as equal opportunities, multi-cultural education, cross-curricular themes, competences and dimensions and special needs.
▪ Since Partnerships have a responsibility to achieve equal opportunities for all young people, community organisations should participate at the planning stage.
▪ The equal opportunities strategy is, the writers claim, likely to be self-defeating.
▪ Partnerships should develop strategies for promoting equal opportunities.
▪ They need to be aware, and should be, of equal opportunity policies as well as trends and developments in their professional environment.
▪ As statutory services continue to implement an equal opportunities policy these matters will need sensitive handling by social services.
▪ At its heart was the pressure of blacks and of their liberal white supporters for equal opportunities in education.
▪ The intention, to create a curriculum which gives equal opportunity to all, is admirable.
golden
▪ The agenda gave Sutton a golden opportunity to stamp his authority on the paper.
▪ But the country as a whole may have missed a golden opportunity to put its fiscal house in order.
▪ Local radio Here is your golden media opportunity for local radio is an expanding market place for public relations.
▪ Personally, I think you have a golden opportunity before you.
▪ This is the golden land of opportunity.
▪ To some animals, this moisture is their golden opportunity and perhaps their signal for dispersal.
▪ For the Treasury this presented a golden opportunity to recover its traditional dominance which it had lost during the war.
▪ Tamny was appalled that Harleston had passed up a golden opportunity to dismiss Jeffries.
good
▪ A golf tournament with royal patronage was too good an opportunity for a publicity-minded company to miss.
▪ Analysts rate the area one of the few good domestic opportunities for new gambling ventures during the coming year.
▪ This closes the opponent off and presents you with a good opportunity to continue the block into the opponent's face.
▪ That, he said, suggests better opportunities for diagnosing nerve damage, and better chances for rehabilitating injured patients.
▪ Dave Thomas, spokesman for the band, said it was a good opportunity for the band to reach a wider audience.
▪ Who ever had a better opportunity?
▪ Most of these exercises are double cast so that there are good opportunities for several readings of the main characters.
great
▪ The contracting culture should mean greater opportunities for voluntary sector providers, but Mussenden identifies problems.
▪ A much greater opportunity, as everyone agreed.
▪ The earlier that users were involved in systems design, the greater the opportunity to introduce systems in a flexible manner.
▪ He said he thinks the spouses were looking for a place with greater shopping opportunities.
▪ Davidson had of course great opportunity for influence upon Baldwin, and he used it to the full on this occasion.
▪ So the great opportunity for planning had been lost.
▪ We also had lots of room, which provided great opportunities not only for tall buildings but for wide buildings.
ideal
▪ Male speaker Our community has three artists working from these workshops and this seemed an ideal opportunity to show their work.
▪ Problem-solving time is also an ideal opportunity to get some insight into how you are feeling and how your child is feeling.
▪ Workshops are an ideal opportunity to meet tutors and exchange ideas with fellow students.
▪ This was an ideal opportunity for a friend of mine who is a gifted seminar leader.
▪ Many catering colleges consider the award to be an ideal opportunity to evaluate their students' progress against other catering colleges.
▪ It is exclusive to Club 18-30, and offers an ideal opportunity to meet other couples on holiday.
▪ However, it is an ideal opportunity to meet one's colleagues on a regular basis and to discuss matters of concern.
new
▪ A hectic, but enjoyable annum ahead brings masses of new openings and opportunities to explore and exploit.
▪ With each shift come new opportunities and threats for affected organizations.
▪ And we intend to give council tenants new opportunities themselves to improve the flat or house in which they live.
▪ If there is any truth to the saying that out of adversity comes new opportunities, then the timing is perfect.
▪ The way this business is moving, you really never know what exciting new opportunities are just around the corner.
▪ Retrospective conversions and new resources offer opportunities for scholars, but they do pose problems for librarians.
▪ Staff would have new opportunities to gain additional skills and benefit from greater flexibility.
▪ The expanding non-agricultural sector itself provided farmers with new opportunities and incentives.
perfect
▪ This match must have seemed the perfect opportunity for him to display his undoubted pace.
▪ For Joseph LaRue, it was the perfect opportunity to do some growing up.
▪ Slightly puzzled, he decided to wait for the perfect opportunity.
▪ My phone call was a perfect opportunity for you to go public with the information.
▪ Charles had a perfect opportunity to show the world that the Waleses are a family reunited.
▪ Car rides, like mealtimes, can be perfect opportunities for conversations.
▪ So here was the perfect opportunity for the profession as a whole to look decisive and effective.
▪ A visit to West Dorset also offers a perfect opportunity to try your hand at windsurfing.
rare
▪ These records provided a rare opportunity to study the attenuation of strong seismic waves as a means of assessing seismic hazard.
▪ I believe that in his treatment of me, I had the rare opportunity to see exactly how a person treats himself.
▪ Otherwise Signor Gismondi would not have granted you this rare opportunity.
▪ They are a rare opportunity to penetrate the usual wall of indifference.
▪ I only ask because you may miss a rare opportunity to improve you life in April, due to misplaced prejudice.
▪ Taylor offered his group a rare opportunity: the freedom to do basic research for a handsome corporate salary.
▪ Today is a rare opportunity for Ulster Members to have parliamentary time.
▪ It represents a rare opportunity to bring your own bottle, without incurring a corkage fee.
unique
▪ There seems to have been very little resentment that Eva should have such a unique opportunity.
▪ This is a unique opportunity not available to trainees elsewhere.
▪ But it seemed a waste not to seize the unique opportunity to stretch your brain on something that genuinely excited you.
▪ You should, therefore, act now to take advantage of a unique investment opportunity.
▪ This is a unique and irreplaceable opportunity.
▪ University offers a unique opportunity to study subjects not offered at school as well as those of which applicants may have some experience.
▪ That certainly would have created a unique photo opportunity.
■ NOUN
business
▪ Never has the start of a new decade been met with such exciting business opportunities.
▪ Bimpson recognised a business opportunity when he discovered that the government had secured domain names for all the schools in his borough.
▪ As general economic conditions and business opportunities change, so must the budget change.
▪ In due course there may be significant business opportunities in these countries, but the immediate need is for educational help.
▪ It will be expensive, but such innovation will lead to new business opportunities.
▪ These can provide the basis of a new business opportunity with relatively little risk.
▪ Jackson estimated the total potential value of these business opportunities at $ 200 million.
cost
▪ A decision to save by building up money balances no longer carries with it the high opportunity cost that it once did.
▪ Empowerment increases the opportunity costs of children, prompting later marriages and increasing the divorce rate, similarly lowering fertility.
▪ This reflects the actual opportunity cost of the resources to society as a whole.
▪ Lost revenues during shutdown periods are opportunity costs that can temporarily reduce profits.
▪ Their social opportunity cost may be close to zero.
▪ The opportunity cost will be the higher of the two options i.e. £5,000.
▪ Using the opportunity cost concept, we consider the alternative.
▪ Such continued reliance on paper will represent an increasing opportunity cost to organisations.
employment
▪ Women had the vote, and education and employment opportunities had increased significantly for single women.
▪ She said she reported the incident to the company's equal employment opportunity manager, who took no immediate action.
▪ For the people, this meant stable price levels, rising living standards, and increased employment opportunities.
▪ Low Countrymen emigrated to the interior, often temporarily, to take advantage of employment opportunities.
▪ Blacks migrated to the District, first to avoid slavery and then for federal employment opportunities which free enterprise long denied.
▪ But agriculture and industry together account for two-thirds of national income and four-fifths of national employment opportunities.
job
▪ So has the parallel progress of women's education, giving them at least in theory the same job opportunities as men.
▪ They expect me to prepare them for this job and their next job opportunity.
▪ Technology and innovation Superstores provide many job opportunities.
▪ I believe there is a direct correlation between the creation of job opportunities and the number of nominees you see every year.
▪ It is argued that the measures would restrict training and job opportunities.
▪ They see the outdoors as a recreation activity, not a job opportunity.
▪ We needed an effective and interesting way of telling our jobseekers about training and job opportunities in the clothing industry.
▪ As school enrollments increase, job opportunities for assistant principals will grow.
photo
▪ Often the local press are looking more for a photo opportunity than a story.
▪ During the talks, a news blackout eliminated contact with the press except for photo opportunities.
▪ Never have soundbites, photo opportunities and spin mattered so much.
▪ You get great photo opportunities on this tour and interesting commentary from the guide.
▪ It's just that Diana hogs all the photo opportunities.
▪ Dole has been more adept at seizing photo opportunities in his out-of-town forays.
▪ Posturing while she checks her lip gloss. Photo opportunity with the dying.
▪ Most never really progress beyond the photo opportunity stage of involvement.
■ VERB
afford
▪ At the same time it afforded a public opportunity for emulation in what Veblen would have termed conspicuous waste.
▪ Some of these may well have afforded opportunities for wealth accumulation and polygamy.
▪ As Lyman and Scott explain: Free territory is carved out of space and affords the opportunities for idiosyncrasy and identity.
▪ Advanced courses afford the opportunity to study classical religious and anti-religious texts of influential philosophers from Plato to Sartre.
▪ Sexuality affords us the opportunity of transgressing the barrier separating life from death.
▪ She was a professional; she couldn't afford to let opportunities pass.
▪ Neither believes that absolutely no one should ever be afforded opportunities that are not the birthright of their class.
arise
▪ Shortly after graduating in 1987, the opportunity arose to work with former Napier student, Tom Kidd.
▪ Take the opportunity, when it arises, to convey something of help or value to the receiver.
▪ As they gain confidence in the therapist opportunities will arise again for these issues to be discussed.
▪ Radio people are keen professionals so find out who makes the decisions and seize opportunities as they arise.
▪ A opportunity arose from a primary study of proliferation in gastric malignancy to investigate BrdUrd labelled gastric mucosa.
▪ Plenty of animals take up unlikely opportunities as they arise.
▪ Mickie then and there decided that if the opportunity arose he would team up with Raoul on future helicopter design.
create
▪ Agriculture has also been the beneficiary of rapid industrial growth and urban development, which have created expanding market opportunities.
▪ It creates opportunity for the storefronts along Congress, all too many of which are vacant these days.
▪ Delicately Louisa had tried again and again to create the opportunity, but she had been allowed no room.
▪ Gutfreund felt the firm created the opportunity for Rubin and therefore deserved the bulk of the rewards.
▪ The provision of the equipment does not ensure the mathematical experience, but can create opportunity for it.
▪ They come out in large numbers and create a great photo opportunity when rising out of the snow.
▪ It was another United man, Phil Neville, whose run created the opportunity.
▪ Public organizations can create a spectrum of opportunities, which different communities can seize as they are ready.
develop
▪ The Society will continue to review business opportunities to develop the Group's activities.
▪ At the other end of the spectrum, young lawyers joining prestigious firms often have little opportunity to develop close client relationships.
▪ There will also be opportunities to develop or practice consultancy and training skills.
▪ And there are few opportunities for students to develop such ability before they enroll in those courses.
▪ Management here is aimed at giving pupils the opportunity to develop these characteristics.
▪ Some states, such as Oklahoma, give the parties the opportunity to develop a procedure for resolving impasses.
▪ I am keen for them to have a greater opportunity to develop both their working and their family lives.
▪ It also provides opportunities for pupils to develop vital skills and learning strategies that can be applied across the school curriculum.
give
▪ The rally gives owners an opportunity to meet fellow enthusiasts and even the chance to buy.
▪ This was a thinly disguised device designed to give Harleston the opportunity to ease Jeffries out painlessly and to find a replacement.
▪ Charge payers are therefore given at least two opportunities to pay their community charge instalment.
▪ I wanted to give our activists every opportunity to prepare themselves for the firestorm of controversy and political backlash that would ensue.
▪ But it does give us an opportunity to examine our institutions.
▪ This extends across all five years and gives students the opportunity to handle animals from the start of the course.
▪ Instead the market has expanded, giving all operators the opportunity to make a profit.
▪ Within three months it was obvious that, given the opportunity, these children could be very bright.
grasp
▪ Isabel had grasped the opportunity of his presence to escape from Gloucester.
▪ Perhaps only Chandos boss Brian Couzens would grasp an opportunity like that.
▪ One person will grasp an opportunity with enthusiasm, whereas another will recoil from the same chance with anxiety and fear.
▪ Seth and his followers quickly grasped their opportunity and immediately closed the lid and fastened it securely.
▪ The Prime Minister failed to grasp that opportunity.
▪ Many labour-only subcontractors have grasped the opportunity to expand initially to a labour and material sub-contractor and subsequently to a general contractor.
▪ Should not the Government grasp that opportunity?
learn
▪ Secondment is an opportunity for them to learn at first hand about the world of work to which their students are aspiring.
▪ Working in the kitchen to prepare a meal provides opportunities to learn about weights, measures, and fractions-and cooperation.
▪ Everyone has a contribution to make to ward teaching and the student should take every possible opportunity to learn.
▪ My involvement with counseling was marked by continuing opportunity to learn and by a strange draw toward more and more troubled people.
▪ It compounded what had been learnt, and gave the opportunity to learn new skills through five different types of dive.
▪ In this procedure, the processing elements compete for the opportunity of learning.
▪ There you will have the opportunity to learn about clog making and cheese preparation.
▪ For this reason, learning organisations invest in creating face-to-face opportunities for learning and knowledge sharing as as well as information technologies.
lose
▪ Thus, a person who becomes a slave loses this opportunity.
▪ It would be stupid, though, to lose the opportunity that all of this presents.
▪ It would be terrible if you lost this opportunity.
▪ The concern in 1970 was that women were losing ground in educational opportunities.
▪ They have lost that opportunity, and it will not come again this side of the election.
▪ Having lost the opportunity to oppose the factory itself, local opposition first focused on the factory's dumping plans.
▪ The impact of lost opportunity on organizational performance will always be problematic.
meet
▪ Those participating had the opportunity to meet with top government and industry officials in the host nations.
▪ Informal chats with guests provide an excellent opportunity to meet consumers and answer their questions about farming and food production.
▪ Diamond apparently was delighted with his opportunity to meet President Zedillo.
▪ The rally gives owners an opportunity to meet fellow enthusiasts and even the chance to buy.
▪ It is exclusive to Club 18-30, and offers an ideal opportunity to meet other couples on holiday.
▪ I constantly sought cover from a host of opportunities to meet my Maker.
miss
▪ The Waterford vase had gone - she had missed her opportunity.
▪ Many of them therefore missed early opportunities for building good will among their subordinates, just when they needed it most.
▪ Not being a woman to miss an opportunity, she described their previous meeting.
▪ The missed opportunities and hidden costs for Zappo were enormous.
▪ Once again in desperate time trouble, Karpov misses this golden opportunity.
▪ Of course, we had an excuse; we had to have an excuse for missing such a huge opportunity.
▪ His tenure is described as a succession of missed opportunities.
▪ But the country as a whole may have missed a golden opportunity to put its fiscal house in order.
offer
▪ Then Saughton Sports Centre is offering an ace opportunity you can't turn down.
▪ The daily firings produced by the withering economy offered loopholes of opportunity for a young man who kept his eyes open.
▪ Over the past 18 months we have launched a number of products offering opportunities for existing customers.
▪ It offers plenty of opportunity for discussion.
▪ A visit to West Dorset also offers a perfect opportunity to try your hand at windsurfing.
▪ In spite of the protection offered by equal opportunity laws, women tend to be overlooked and receive fewer promotions.
▪ Retrospective conversions and new resources offer opportunities for scholars, but they do pose problems for librarians.
▪ The 1996 Olympic Torch Relay offers such an opportunity.
open
▪ It opens up opportunities to supply a wide variety of users with information which is timely, accurate, significant and relevant.
▪ The fliers knew there was a spoiler on the horizon, knew that delay might open a window of opportunity for others.
▪ Despite the requirement to open contracts and business opportunities to all comers, somehow those countries manage to choose their own nationals.
▪ Taylor said the opening up of opportunities for minorities in television would lead to more opportunities in films.
▪ This can open up new opportunities and create social mobility.
▪ Even limiting the choice to alternative financial assets still opens up many opportunities.
▪ We will make financial assistance available for part-time study. Open up new opportunities for study.
▪ To become pro-active, keep an eye open permanently for opportunities to take further steps forward towards profit.
present
▪ Whether the vendors' financial arrangements present any structuring opportunities?
▪ The time for adding new water presents an opportunity for cleaning the tank generally and giving close inspection to the inhabitants.
▪ Dudley also presented Richard Baxter with opportunities for public preaching.
▪ The turmoil of reorganization always presents such opportunities.
▪ A debate would present a good opportunity to underline the fact that many countries are experiencing far more difficulties than we are.
▪ Every one of these nodes presents the opportunity for snooping.
▪ For many visitors to the country the stations might present the main opportunity to see apartheid in action.
▪ The results are likely to come as a surprise presenting many untapped market opportunities and will certainly dispel complacency.
provide
▪ This programme was designed to improve their relationship with Gary by providing opportunities for mutually reinforcing activities.
▪ Trips provide opportunities for learning geography and map reading.
▪ Today's carriage visit to Grasse provided a most suitable opportunity.
▪ And parenthood does provide opportunities to help children help themselves: Get to know your children.
▪ The enlarged Group provides enhanced opportunities for portfolio rationalisation through sales and asset swaps.
▪ Team members stay in one job for several months, but can then change to provide fresh challenges and opportunities.
▪ Group treatment can also provide an opportunity for patients to share experiences and learn from each other.
▪ The market provides plenty of opportunities, and trade-offs.
seize
▪ Some of them, like some Karavas, seized available economic opportunities and joined the new élite.
▪ Leaders seize opportunities and push ahead.
▪ Their desire to leave farming will simply be increased and they will seize the first opportunity to move.
▪ Over most of the twentieth century organizations worried about choosing and seizing growth opportunities through adding capacity and people.
▪ A local feudal family, the BalÜici, seized their opportunity and established themselves as rulers of Zeta.
▪ How do you seize the opportunity?
▪ Radio people are keen professionals so find out who makes the decisions and seize opportunities as they arise.
▪ The elite nature of the scientists and their consequent alienation from many of these changes prevent them from seizing upon these opportunities.
take
▪ I also took the opportunity of giving them Mr Connon's phone number so they could contact me if they wished.
▪ I had taken the opportunity to break out a pair of bright red suspenders with large gold dollar signs running down them.
▪ These shears are not generally available to the public, so take this opportunity to acquire a pair now.
▪ I hope that all hon. Members representing Northern Ireland will take the opportunity to invest in the economic future of the Province.
▪ Mr Young said he has had to sell stock he would prefer to keep in order to take advantage of new opportunities.
▪ I hope that they will take the opportunity to ask Mr. Millan to release these moneys for the benefit of their areas.
▪ Grateful to be spared the unsettling power of that dark gaze, Ronni took the opportunity to study him for a moment.
▪ He had taken the opportunity of riding for a big stable with both hands and notched his first Group race victory.
waste
▪ Voice over Derby had one more chance to balance the books but Paul Kitson wasted a glorious opportunity by blasting wide.
▪ They pointed to the wasted opportunities.
▪ Not to mention wasted opportunity for the thousands of amputees better deserving of such an opportunity.
▪ The campaign does not want to waste the opportunity.
▪ All the other matches ended in draws but Nottinghamshire wasted an opportunity to go top of the table at Lord's.
▪ They paid dearly for wasting goalscoring opportunities.
▪ Then Wayne Bullimore wasted a great opportunity for Barnsley after he beat Gittens.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a golden opportunity
▪ By not buying that stock, I missed a golden opportunity to become a millionaire.
▪ As a result a company may have a golden opportunity to remove its operators from their central role in controlling production.
▪ But the country as a whole may have missed a golden opportunity to put its fiscal house in order.
▪ But Tories have attacked the decision and say a golden opportunity to boost foreign trade links could have been lost.
▪ Classic footage, but a golden opportunity wasted to trace his career from his Olympic gold medal days.
▪ For the Treasury this presented a golden opportunity to recover its traditional dominance which it had lost during the war.
▪ Personally, I think you have a golden opportunity before you.
▪ Tamny was appalled that Harleston had passed up a golden opportunity to dismiss Jeffries.
▪ The agenda gave Sutton a golden opportunity to stamp his authority on the paper.
grasp an opportunity
▪ One person will grasp an opportunity with enthusiasm, whereas another will recoil from the same chance with anxiety and fear.
▪ Perhaps only Chandos boss Brian Couzens would grasp an opportunity like that.
leap at the chance/opportunity
▪ It would be naive to believe that there aren't lots of people who would leap at the opportunity.
▪ Some may leap at the chance.
miss a chance/opportunity
▪ It would be unforgivable to miss this opportunity to travel.
▪ He didn't miss an opportunity.
▪ He must not miss a chance when it comes through being preoccupied with something else.
▪ History was being catalogued here, the missed opportunities, blunders, and outright mistakes.
▪ However, though I had missed a chance, the advantages were now all on my side and distinctly in my favour.
▪ It was a missed opportunity that they might never regain.
▪ Now, as many times before, the City is missing a chance to put the system right.
▪ The missed opportunities and hidden costs for Zappo were enormous.
▪ The snakes are sometimes hard to find, so the Webers never miss a chance to make a kill.
seize a chance/an opportunity/the initiative
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ After they had refused him the opportunity of improving his position, he resigned.
▪ All he needs is an opportunity to show his ability.
▪ All over the world women are demanding equal opportunities.
▪ Career opportunities for nurses have improved in the last 10 years.
▪ Educators are worried about rapidly diminishing opportunities for graduates.
▪ It was too good an opportunity to pass up.
▪ She was delighted to have an opportunity to talk with someone who shared her interest in classical music.
▪ There are several opportunities for experienced designers and researchers.
▪ We see this as an exciting opportunity for our companies to work together.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Clinton could challenge his allies to face that difficult reality and begin formulating alternative means for expanding opportunity.
▪ Critics had the opportunity to write poetically of the ceaseless, easy flow of rivers and this one in particular.
▪ I bowed to each one, smiling whenever one of them gave me the opportunity.
▪ If it came, it came; it was no reason to turn from opportunity.
▪ On the other hand, in urban areas there are now more opportunities for women with high school education to find jobs.
▪ Problem-solving time is also an ideal opportunity to get some insight into how you are feeling and how your child is feeling.
▪ That is an opportunity cost just like investment analysts view opportunity costs.