How to Use have a field day in a Sentence
have a field day
idiom-
This isn’t one of them; Dak Prescott should have a field day.
— Dallas News, 25 Sep. 2020 -
Reddit day-traders will have a field day with this one.
— Daniel Tenreiro, National Review, 8 Oct. 2020 -
So it’s not far fetched to assume that whiskey Twitter will have a field day with this.
— Jonah Flicker, Robb Report, 28 July 2022 -
Tech companies, both large and small, can have a field day in the Big Apple.
— Brad Thomas, Forbes, 11 Sep. 2021 -
Parents will have a field day filling this and kids will enjoy it just as much.
— Ysolt Usigan, Woman's Day, 23 Nov. 2022 -
Cincinnati’s offense will have a field day feasting on the dirty birds Sunday.
— Michael Niziolek, cleveland, 21 Oct. 2022 -
Oddly, traders still managed to have a field day dodging in and out of shares of the bankrupt company.
— Phil Wahba, Fortune, 4 Aug. 2020 -
The defensive ends should have a field day against the NFL’s worst offensive tackle pairing.
— Dieter Kurtenbach, The Mercury News, 10 Feb. 2024 -
Fido will have a field day at this doggie beachside paradise.
— Stacey Leasca, Travel + Leisure, 17 June 2022 -
The Consumer Product Safety Commission would have a field day, too.
— John Kelly, Washington Post, 11 Sep. 2022 -
The show has received plenty of it, from dark jokes about how Sigmund Freud would have a field day to viral clips posted to social media.
— Emily Yahr, Washington Post, 30 Jan. 2023 -
If he gets indicted, Repubs are going to have a field day blaming his father for the son’s misdeeds.
— Globe Staff, BostonGlobe.com, 30 Mar. 2022 -
Still, going against what was one of the worst rushing defenses in college football in 2019, Army’s triple-option attack is in line to have a field day.
— Usa Today Sports, USA TODAY, 12 Sep. 2020 -
If an unheard-of Lumberjacks team could have a field day against Arizona, then Oregon’s prospect of lighting it up on Saturday should be very good, to say the least.
— Jeremy Cluff, The Arizona Republic, 21 Sep. 2021 -
Although the Frog defense should have a field day, inconsistency has plagued the Cyclones this season.
— Dallas News, 23 Nov. 2022 -
While Dickinson will likely have a field day down low, U-M hasn't fared well in close games all year, and a shocking end would be fitting in a season that never got on track.
— Tony Garcia, Detroit Free Press, 14 Mar. 2023 -
That biodiversity hardens urban ecosystems against pests that would have a field day with a monocrop.
— WIRED, 27 Feb. 2023 -
Armchair psychologists tend to have a field day at points of crisis in Netanyahu’s political career, of which there have been many.
— Dina Kraft, Los Angeles Times, 23 May 2021 -
Would Trump and Republicans have a field day attacking Democratic insiders for pulling a fast one on the public?
— Ross Douthat, The Mercury News, 13 Feb. 2024 -
What's more, because magnification ranges from 4.5x all the way up to a whopping 30x, long-range shooters can have a field day on the range and the ability to reach out with shots unattainable with many less-powerful scopes.
— Field & Stream, 23 Nov. 2020 -
And while that’s bad news for countless people and businesses who have invested in cryptocurrencies, the legal profession is about to have a field day.
— Tristan Bove, Fortune, 19 Nov. 2022 -
And too much emphasis on the ground attack would leave redshirt sophomore quarterback Spencer Sanders to have a field day with Wallace, who already has 401 receiving yards and two touchdowns in four games.
— Nick Moyle, ExpressNews.com, 30 Oct. 2020 -
The Japanese right would have a field day, exclaiming that the country's reliance on the United States for its security had left it unable to defend its interests.
— Gerald L. Curtis, Foreign Affairs, 1 Mar. 2013 -
Freud would have a field day with the intersection of the erotic and near-death that come together in these sequences, which Erin Casper and Jocelyne Chaput edit with an unerring sense of nature’s own percussion.
— Daniel Fienberg, The Hollywood Reporter, 20 Jan. 2022 -
Humans fall into mental traps known as cognitive distortions all the time, pandemic or not, but oh boy did a few cognitive distortions have a field day in 2020.
— Anna Borges, SELF, 28 Dec. 2020 -
With her ego bruised, possibly gone, the id has stepped in to fill the void and have a field day insulting her friends, soaking up the vacant social media adulation, disregarding advice to get actual support.
— New York Times, 10 Dec. 2020 -
Thinking back to the alienation of affection by robot (lawyers should have a field day with that one in custody battles), could a robot have a role in improving parent-to-parent or parent-to-child communication?
— IEEE Spectrum, 31 July 2017 -
Fox News and more would have a field day with two of the main characters having campaigned to get their college to divest from fossil fuels, work long supported by prominent environmental non-profits.
— Kate Aronoff, The New Republic, 5 Apr. 2023 -
Historians would have a field day with the film’s version of that summary coming from a former New York Times reporter and editor, considering the paper’s controversial coverage of the war.
— Michael Ordoña, Los Angeles Times, 23 Dec. 2021 -
Actors like Ali Stroker (as the twins’ resentful sister) and Karen Robinson (as their hometown’s suspicious sheriff) have a field day by diving headfirst into the show’s drama, delivering each line to register from a mile away.
— Caroline Framke, Variety, 18 Aug. 2022
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'have a field day.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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