Glossary entry (derived from question below)
English term or phrase:
hijacking
English answer:
disruption and diversion (refocusing) of attention
English term
hijacking
I'm looking to get the whole sentence "hijacking an official reception".
The situation is about a group of people protesting against the visit of high profile figure to their country.
Thanks in advance,
Nov 10, 2020 10:59: Yvonne Gallagher Created KOG entry
PRO (1): Yvonne Gallagher
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Responses
disrupting the reception so focus is on hijacking/hijackers
It has the meaning of 2 a) b) below where the organisers lose control of the reception for their purposes as the hijackers have manged to disrupt it so much
https://www.thefreedictionary.com/hijacked
2.
a. To take control of (something) without permission or authorization and use it for one's own purposes: dissidents who hijacked the town council; spammers who hijacked a computer network.
b. To steal or appropriate for oneself: hijacked her story and used it in his own book.
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Note added at 2 days 23 mins (2020-11-10 03:22:40 GMT) Post-grading
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Not as common as hijacking a plane but not that uncommon either.
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Note added at 2 days 7 hrs (2020-11-10 10:54:53 GMT) Post-grading
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it is quite often used with the meaning of disruption or interruption so that attention is focused in a different direction (or onto the hijacker).
If you google "Hijack a meeting" there are lots of examples e.g.
https://www.justiceclearinghouse.com/resource/managing-the-m...
https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/hijack
It is not common to use the word "hijacking" in such a context, right? |
agree |
Tony M
: Well explained!
1 hr
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Thanks!
|
|
agree |
Daryo
: in this ST, the point of "hijacking" an official reception was most likely in grabbing for themselves media attention, not a literal "hijacking" as in "taking hostage all persons present" as would be the "hijacking" of a plane.
1 hr
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Thanks!
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breaking into and taking control of
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Note added at 22 mins (2020-11-08 03:21:24 GMT)
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or at least trying to take control
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Note added at 23 mins (2020-11-08 03:22:26 GMT)
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bit ambiguous
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Note added at 52 mins (2020-11-08 03:50:51 GMT)
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and really hard to interpret
Could it be take the highlight of the official reception? I mean make the public focus on them instead of the main event. Thank you. |
agree |
Anastasia Andriani
2 hrs
|
agree |
philgoddard
3 hrs
|
agree |
Mark Robertson
4 hrs
|
agree |
Sheila Wilson
8 hrs
|
neutral |
Yvonne Gallagher
: I think it goes further. Asker has got the meaning of this in their question to you
10 hrs
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disagree |
Daryo
: clue: "throwing flour bombs at the president's car" // these are attention seekers bent on doing a PR stunt, not deadly fanatics => "taking control of" makes no sense.
1 day 21 hrs
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Discussion
Being nothing more than a nuisance / a pain in the neck for the invited guests is hardly "taking control".