cherry-pick
/ˈtʃeri pɪk/ (bre, ipa) · /ˈtʃeri pɪk/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈcher-ē-ˌpik/ (ame, mw)
cherry-pick — verb
- cherry-pickpresent simple I / you / we / they
- cherry-pickshe / she / it
- cherry-pickedpast simple
- cherry-picking-ing form
1. to take only the people, facts, or things that suit you best from a larger colle
to take only the people, facts, or things that suit you best from a larger collection, leaving the rest behind as unwanted or less valuable
Diego cherry-picked the ripest avocados from the crate and left the bruised ones behind.
cherry-pick + noun + from + noun (source)
Ananya accused the reporter of cherry-picking facts that made one side look guilty.
cherry-pick + facts / evidence — biased selection
Kwame noticed his new manager had cherry-picked the best staff for her own project team.
Brigitte discovered the scholarship panel had cherry-picked winners from the wealthiest suburbs.
Noor explained that cherry-picking just three data points made the whole study misleading.
- hand-pick
similar but less negative; hand-pick suggests careful personal choice, while cherry-pick often implies unfair or self-serving selection
- select
neutral and general; lacks the connotation of deliberately leaving the rest diminished
- cull
emphasizes removing the unwanted rather than keeping the best
文法句型
cherry-pick + noun
cherry-pick + noun + from + noun
用法筆記
Often carries a negative implication — the person cherry-picking is ignoring evidence or options that do not support their goal. Frequently used with 'from' to name the source group. In formal writing, the object is commonly 'facts', 'data', 'statistics', or 'examples'.