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What is the opposite of "setting the bar"?

English Language & Usage Asked on April 28, 2021

I am looking for a metaphorical phrase which would mean the opposite of "set the bar". Like "set the upper limit", but not that straightforward.

When you set the bar, you are defining the lower level of standard for something. It is OK if you do better than the bar they set.

When you do the opposite, you are defining the upper level. It is OK to do at this level or worse, but not better.

Listen, man, we need our jobs. If this new guy keeps going at this pace, they will lower the rates and fire our asses. Take Tim and Rob with you, meet him behind the warehouse and explain to him that he should ________ (do the opposite of setting the bar) at five thousand pounds of cargo per day.

When I am saying "fifty cold calls a day", I am setting the bar, not _______ (doing the opposite of setting the bar). No one will be mad at you if you call more. You don’t have to call it a day the moment you’ve made your fiftieth call".

One Answer

Defining such a level or limit is setting or placing a cap or to cap as a verb.

From Lexico:

‘council budgets will be capped’
SYNONYMS set a limit on, put a ceiling on, limit, restrict, keep within bounds
curb, control, peg
‘The legislation, however, does not place a flat cap on the value of the homestead exemption that an individual can exempt in bankruptcy.’

"Explain to him that he should cap it at five thousand pounds" would mean not to exceed that amount and to pace himself accordingly. His coworkers might tell him not to break the curve, but that doesn't work as well for your second example. Both are related to quota and distribution.

"When I am saying "fifty cold calls a day," I am setting the bar, not capping it at that/not placing a cap on it at fifty" would mean that while fifty calls are expected, that number isn't the ceiling. It's not the cap, so feel free to keep going.

Answered by livresque on April 28, 2021

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