Explanation

  • Until the very last moment; describes a situation whose outcome is uncertain until the very end, especially a competition or contest.

Origin

  • Comes from horse racing.
  • Historically, a wire was stretched across the finish line of a racetrack.
  • A race that was so close that the winner wasn't clear until the horses reached this wire was said to go down to the wire.
  • The phrase extended to any contest, competition, election, or deadline-driven situation that remains undecided until the final moments.

Alternatives

Slang/Informal:

  • Nail-biter (Describes a situation causing nervous tension)
  • Too close to call (Outcome uncertain)

Milder:

  • Until the very end
  • Decided at the last moment

Situational Appropriateness

  • Appropriate in informal to semi-formal contexts, especially when discussing competitions (sports, elections) or negotiations with a deadline.
  • Widely understood and common.

Misunderstanding Warnings

  • Learners might be confused by the literal wire. Explain the horse racing origin and its application to any situation decided at the very end.
  • Differentiate it from at the eleventh hour by its stronger association with competition and uncertainty resolved only at the conclusion.

Examples

  • The election is going right down to the wire; it's too close to call.
  • It was a tight game that went down to the wire.
  • Negotiations went down to the wire, but they finally reached a deal.

Dialogue

Sports Announcer 1: Only 30 seconds left on the clock, and the score is tied!

Sports Announcer 2: This championship game is really coming down to the wire, folks! Unbelievable tension.

Sports Announcer 1: The home team has possession... here comes the final play!

Social Media Examples

  • Live Tweet: This game is going down to the wire! Edge of my seat! #NBAFinals #Basketball #Tense
  • Post: Election results are still coming in... looks like this one is going right down to the wire. #ElectionNight #Politics
  • Comment: Wow, that funding deadline really went down to the wire, but we made it! Congrats team! #startup #success

Response Patterns

  • I know, it's so tense!
  • Who do you think will win?
  • I can't watch! (Playfully or genuinely stressed)
  • It's nail-biting!

Common Follow-up Questions/Actions

After hearing a situation is down to the wire:

  • People usually pay close attention to the final moments or results.
  • Discussion often focuses on predictions or the remaining possibilities.

Conversation Starter

  • No.
  • Describes the state of a situation nearing its conclusion, particularly one involving competition or uncertainty.

Intonation

  • Often spoken with excitement, tension, or suspense.
  • Stress usually falls on down and wire.
  • It's coming DOWN to the WIRE!

Generation Differences

  • Widely understood across generations.

Regional Variations

  • Common in all major English-speaking regions, perhaps especially prevalent in North America due to sports commentary.
At the eleventh hour