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carte blanche
[ kahrt blanch, blahnch; French kart blahnsh ]
noun
- unconditional authority; full discretionary power:
It appears that the government has given the military carte blanche.
She was given carte blanche to decorate her room as she wished, perhaps an unwise decision by her parents.
Synonyms: free hand, blank check, free rein, license
- a sheet of paper that is blank except for a signature and given by the signer to another person to write in what they please.
- Cards. a hand having no face card but with a special scoring value, as in piquet.
carte blanche
/ kart blɑ̃ʃ; ˈkɑːt ˈblɑːntʃ /
noun
- complete discretion or authority
the government gave their negotiator carte blanche
- cards a piquet hand containing no court cards: scoring ten points
carte blanche
- To be given “carte blanche” is to receive the power and authority to do as one wishes: “The prime minister herself did not take any action on the refugee issue but gave her minister of the interior carte blanche to deal with the situation.” Carte blanche is French for “blank card,” meaning one that can be filled in as a person wishes.
Word History and Origins
Origin of carte blanche1
Word History and Origins
Origin of carte blanche1
Example Sentences
Throughout the campaign, both Musk and Trump suggested that Musk would be given carte blanche over the operations of the federal government, including running what they’re calling a Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, with a mandate to slash spending.
Those proverbial guardrails that kept him in check his first term may no longer be there — Trump has said he will see to that — and with carte blanche from a supine Supreme Court, his maliciousness may be limited only by Trump’s febrile imagination.
And its triumph could give other red states carte blanche to purge the rolls on the eve of all future elections.
After banning abortion throughout much of the country, anti-abortion agitators are now asking the Trump justices for carte blanche to harass patients and providers in the states where abortion remains available.
Most notoriously, they reversed several landmark rulings that limited partisan redistricting, giving the GOP-dominated Legislature carte blanche to gerrymander Democrats into a permanent minority.
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