has left the building

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Derived from Elvis has left the building.

Pronunciation[edit]

  • (file)

Phrase[edit]

has left the building

  1. (idiomatic, humorous) Something is gone and never coming back.
    • 2008, Jan Mouritsen, Organisational Capital: Modelling, Measuring and Contextualising, Routledge, →ISBN, page 24:
      Organisational capital is typically described as dead. It is what has been left behind after human capital has left the building.
    • 2012, Fred Eyre, Kicked into Touch: Plus Extra Time, Random House, →ISBN, page 9:
      The quality-control department has left the building and anyone with a halfdecent memory of a half-remembered match is out there publishing his memoirs. The scraps, the scrapes, the sessions — oh, what fun we had. Except we didn't have much fun, did we? Most of them are poor.
    • 2012, Bethany Palmer, The 5 Money Personalities: Speaking the Same Love and Money ..., Thomas Nelson, →ISBN, page 29:
      When a Risk Taker gets a hold of an idea, reason has left the building. And with it go concern for other people's feelings, attention to details, and longrange planning.
    • 2012, Joelle Burnette, Cancer Time Bomb: How the Brca Gene Stole My Tits and Eggs, Joelle Burnette, →ISBN, page 40:
      Just as I can run through a long succession of too many negative "what if" scenarios, my mom is equally efficient at producing a long list of what could go right. Of course, she generally takes it a step beyond into the absolute impossibility of positivity after the logic train has left the building; I find her rosy interpretations rather annoying and frustrating.
    • 2013, Josiane Feigon, Smart Sales Manager: The Ultimate Playbook for Building and ..., AMACOM, →ISBN, page 47:
      Sales 1.0 —and its outdated and ineffective sales tactics— has left the building. Today's Sales 2.0 is fueled by tools.

Usage notes[edit]

"has left the building" is frequently used in titles, for example "Google blogger has left the building"[1] and "Florence Nightingale Has Left the Building".[2]

References[edit]

  1. ^ “Google blogger has left the building”, in Cnet[1], 2005 February 9
  2. ^ Vicky DeCoster (2012) The Wacky World of Womanhood: Essays on Girlhood, Dating, Motherhood, and the Loss of Matching Underwear, Booktango, →ISBN, page 72