Citations:top-heavy

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English citations of top-heavy

(having a high centre of gravity):

  • 1793, Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures, and Commerce, The Complete Farmer[1], 4th edition:
    one of his reapers, when he had made up ſome wheat into ſheaves, the wheat being long-eared and top-heavy, ſaid, rain had not need meet with thoſe ſheaves before they were carried home.
  • 1847, Isachar Cozzens, “Remarks on inorganic matters in vegetable products”, in New York Journal of Medicine, volume 8, page 75:
    Should this tree grow to a large size, and afterwards fall by the wind, or become top-heavy, the roots will probably rend the stone wall of the furnace, and throw the stones up and around about it.

(having an excessive number of administrators or managers):

  • 1895, Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States, Collection of Circulars of Various State Commanderies, part 4:
    Two years ago it was claimed that the National Guard of California was top-heavy ; that it had too many brigades ; too many officers. I believe that was the fact.

(of a retirement plan, having significant assets allocated to key employees):

  • 1984, Commerce Clearing House, U.S. Master Tax Guide, page 195; 199:
    Thus, in the Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982 (TEFRA), Congress directed its attention to this problem without regard to whether the owners were proprietors, partners, or corporate share-holders and drew up new rules for so-called “top-heavy” plans (see ¶ 540). []
    For taxable years beginning after 1983, special, more stringent, qualification requirements must be met for plans that primarily benefit an employer's key employees. Such plans are referred to as “top-heavy” plans (Code Sec. 416).

(of a person, having a disproportionately large bust):

  • 1892, Robert P. Harris, “The blended Tocci brothers and their historical analogues”, in American Journal of Obstetrics and Diseases of Women and Children, volume 25, page 467:
    These boys are decidedly top-heavy, which is due to the defects of their form and the condition of the left leg and foot, to which is added a want of muscular co-ordination.
  • 2012, Cam Rascoe, Hennry Horrowitz Presents:Harlots Hustlers & Heroines, page 74:
    Hanna knew Johnny was a sucker for big breasts and she could see that he noticed them [] Hanna had a much nicer shape than Lucy but she was top-heavy, perfect.

(figurative):

  • 1878, Michigan Department of Public Instruction, Report of the Superintendent of Public Instruction, page xxx:
    It is charged against the schools, not of Michigan merely but of the United States, that they are unduly expensive, “top-heavy,” and that the intellectual and moral results from them have not been what society requires for its safety, and has a right to demand. [] The charge means, I suppose, that undue attention is given to the higher branches of study.