gold plate
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
See also: gold-plate
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Noun
[edit]gold plate (countable and uncountable, plural gold plates)
- A thin layer of gold applied to the surface of an object, often by an electrolytic method.
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see gold, plate.
Verb
[edit]gold plate (third-person singular simple present gold plates, present participle gold plating, simple past and past participle gold plated)
- To apply gold plate to an object, to plate with gold.
- (of projects) To incorporate costly or otherwise excessive features or refinements unnecessarily, to overengineer.
- 1991, Advisory Commission on Regulatory Barriers to Affordable Housing, “Regulatory Barriers in the Suburbs”, in Thomas H. Kean, Thomas Ludlow Ashley, editors, Not in My Back Yard: Removing Barriers to Affordable Housing:[1], DIANE Publishing, published 1993, →ISBN, Excessive Subdivision Controls, page 2-8:
- Some communities gold-plate their subdivision ordinances because they know that developers, rather than the local voters, are paying.
- 2008, Wayne Turk, Common Sense Project Management[3], American Society for Quality, →ISBN, Chapter 10: An Introduction, Continued Project Management 101, Part 2, page 59:
- Exceed expectations. This sounds contradictory to the earlier advice not to accept extra or unnecessary tasks and not to gold plate requirements, but it is not.
- (of laws, regulations, etc) To embellish, to extend beyond its intended scope, especially so as to become stifling, or rigid and inflexible.
- 2006, House of Lords, quoting Bill Callaghan, Government Policy on the Management of Risk: 5th Report of Session 2005-06[4], Volume II: Evidence, The Stationery Office, →ISBN, 17 January 2006 - Mr Bill Callaghan and Mr Geoffrey Podger; Q276, page 84:
- I do not think that we gold plate European regulations although I think others, insurers and other industry bodies, may gold plate on our behalf.
- 2008, Simon Marsden, Strategic Environmental Assessment in International and European Law: A Practitioner's Guide[5], Earthscan, →ISBN, Part II - European Law, Chapter 12 Comparisons and Conclusions, page 282:
- Devolved administrations in individual jurisdictions can always choose to gold plate requirements by doing more than a treaty of directive requires, subject to the constitutional provisions under which they were created.
- 2009, Wim Voermans, edited by Henk Snijders and Stefan Vogenauer, Content and Meaning of National Law in the Context of Transnational Law[6], Sellier. European Law Publishers, →ISBN, Gold-Plating and Double Banking: an Overrated Problem?, page 84:
- In order to find our whether the UK tends to gold plate (and double bank) more than other EU countries – as was suggested by some commentators – the Davidson Review adopted a multi-stage approach.
Usage notes
[edit]The sense relating to laws and regulations is particularly used in relation to European Union directives