Originally posted by: Brutuskend
Originally posted by: Skoorb
Originally posted by: Brutuskend
Originally posted by: Skoorb
Originally posted by: allisolm
"Some new projects are coming down the pipe." is the right way. Pike is something you stab people with. Ever heard "What's coming down the pipeline these days?" - there is no pikeline!
Different strokes....
A pike is also a road and I am familiar with the saying as "down the pike" meaning down the road, coming up in the future, coming at us. "Some new projects are coming down the pike." I've never heard "coming down the pipe."
Surely you've heard of the "fat pipeline" that new business developers love to refer to?
Yes. but this term was around LONG before the phrase Pipeline started being used in it's
[sic
] current form.
This person says it's pike, but I still maintain that pipe makes just as much sense, so I guess it is personal preference!
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language: Fourth Edition. 2000.
pike3
PRONUNCIATION: pk
NOUN: 1. A turnpike. 2a. A tollgate on a turnpike. b. A toll paid.
INTRANSITIVE VERB: Inflected forms: piked, pik·ing, pikes
To move quickly.
IDIOM: come down the pike Slang To come into prominence: ?a policy . . . allowing for little flexibility if an important new singer comes down the pike? (Christian Science Monitor).
ETYMOLOGY: Short for turnpike.