0 to complete the movement of hitting, kicking, or throwing a ball by continuing to move your arm or leg in the same direction: --
1 the action of completing something: --
My tennis instructor says I need to have a better follow-through on my backhand.
They made a good start at improving prison conditions, but unless there’s follow-through, the reforms won’t last.
3 the action of completing something: --
[ C usually sing ] My tennis instructor says I need to have a better follow-through on my backhand.
[ U ] They made a good start at improving prison conditions, but unless there’s follow-through, the reforms won’t last.
4 something that is done as the next part of an activity or period of development: --
Most of the theory of data protection is obvious, but follow-through remains an important responsibility.
We are hoping in the near future to implement a follow-through subsidy for clients leaving options and entering employment.
Whatever education can be carried out in the schools, there must be some follow-through.
That is where we start to get follow-through benefits.
This surely would be the follow-through logically of this approach towards federalisation that it made.
That is the natural and logical follow-through of his argument.
The follow-through has not been watched carefully, so the results were not compared properly.
There was a major follow-through of those recommendations.
He persuaded me that there was this tremendous follow-through benefit for us if we would go ahead.