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poison pill
[ poi-zuhn pil ]
noun
- Also called su·i·cide pill. a pellet or capsule of a quick-acting poison, as cyanide, for a spy to ingest when faced with capture or torture.
- Financial Slang. any of various business devices created to prevent a company from being taken over by another, as issuing a new class of stock or stock warrants that would become costly to the buyer in the event of a takeover.
poison pill
noun
- finance a tactic used by a company fearing an unwelcome takeover bid, in which the value of the company is automatically reduced, as by the sale of an issue of shares having an option unfavourable to the bidders, if the bid is successful
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Word History and Origins
Origin of poison pill1
First recorded in 1945–50
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Example Sentences
This led them to resort to a poison pill, which could be immediately effective.
From Fortune
They have created a poison pill that they know you will never want to take.
From The Daily Beast
Many a sorely wounded lad has died with a cigarette in his mouth, whose dying was less bitter because of the "poison pill."
From Project Gutenberg
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