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A phrase for inconvenient timing?
Guest
1
2010/09/28 - 5:16pm

Hi,
I was wondering if there is a phrase that describes the occurrence of something (usually undesirable) at an inconvenient time? For instance, running out of gas on the way to an important meeting. If not a phrase, then maybe there is a "law" of some kind?

Thanks,
Rajesh

Guest
2
2010/09/28 - 5:32pm

Well, you can always go for ironic versions like "inevitable". Or "welcome" (as in "just as the traffic slowed to a crawl, I was seranaded by the welcome sound of my tire flop-flop-flopping merrily on the baking hot pavement"). But failing that, the only word that comes to mind is "inconvenient"—though sometimes that word seems far too mild to carry the necessary weight.

Ron Draney
721 Posts
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3
2010/09/28 - 6:13pm

arke said:

I was wondering if there is a phrase that describes the occurrence of something (usually undesirable) at an inconvenient time? For instance, running out of gas on the way to an important meeting. If not a phrase, then maybe there is a "law" of some kind?


"Murphy's Law" is phrased a lot of different ways, but one form says "anything that can go wrong will, and at the worst possible time".

So if you need a term for just the second part of that, you might call it "Murphy's Corollary".

Guest
4
2010/09/29 - 10:00am

Thanks - that sounds reasonable, although I am still holding out hope for a more pithy way of expressing this thought!

Guest
5
2010/09/29 - 12:23pm

An uncommon word, intuitive despite its rarity, would be inopportunity. Inopportune is more common.

Wordnik: inopportunity
Dictionary.com: inopportunity
Websters: inopportunity
etc.

It knocks a lot, and at just the wrong times.

Guest
6
2010/09/29 - 2:44pm

Glenn said:

It knocks a lot, and at just the wrong times.


Nice 🙂

Guest
7
2010/09/29 - 6:14pm

Rajesh, in case you don't already understand, the reason we're admiring Glenn's sally is the saying that "opportunity knocks but once" (ie "only once"), meaning when you get a chance at a good opportunity, you should take advantage of it because you probably won't get a second chance. Inopportunity would be the opposite—it knocks a lot. But "inopportune" means "occurring at an inconvenient or inappropriate time", which is why Glenn says inopportunity knocks at just the wrong times. Lee's right, Glenn.

Guest
8
2010/09/30 - 2:27pm

"Inopportune" is good. "Unpropitious" and "ill-timed" are two other possibilities. They may not be everyday terms, but their meanings would generally be clear from context.

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