| 释义 | hob·son's choice \|häbsənz-\ noun
 Usage: usually capitalized H
 Etymology: after Thomas Hobson died 1631 English liveryman; from his practice of requiring every customer to take the horse which stood nearest the door
 1.  : an apparent freedom to take or reject something offered when in actual fact no such freedom exists : an apparent freedom of choice where there is no real alternative:
 a.  : the forced acceptance of something whether one likes it or not (as in a so-called free election where only one candidate is proposed)
 b.
 (1)  : the necessity of accepting something objectionable through the fact that one would otherwise get nothing at all (as an underpaid job rather than no job at all)
 (2)  : the necessity of accepting one of two or more equally objectionable things (as enslavement or annihilation by a conquered people)
 2.  : something that one must accept through want of any real alternative : the object of a Hobson's choice
 < military unity … is … a Hobson's choice which all accept — V.D.Hurd >
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