Definition of "on the nose"
on the nose
prepositional phrase
Quotations
“I think the part of me that is sensible, the part that's most on the nose about making decisions about how and what to write, is the part which wants to continue working toward the Turgenev model in fiction. Which is simply based on the idea that novels have to be extremely efficient to survive. […] ”
1979, Toby Thompson, The '60s Report, Rawson, Wade, page 239
[Lawrence:] [At the audition,] it was me and five or six women with the large breasts, the short skirts, the hair and makeup. They were just much more on the nose, in terms of what someone who was sexually voracious would look like. I was in a sweater and slacks, hiding the sexuality.
1997 September, Jill Daniel, quoting Sharon Lawrence, “The Metamorph”, in Orange Coast, page 37
In particular Miguel/Guy forces Christina/Mia to swallow bad-tasting food before a dining hall full of onlookers. The double meaning is much more on-the-nose in the remake since Guy actually says “swallow it for once in your life,” to his put-upon spouse.
2011, John Kenneth Muir, Horror Films of the 1990s, McFarland, page 439
Unimaginative; over-literal; lacking nuance.
Quotations
Although the show gradually grows more subtle, much of the early writing that establishes the characters is so on the nose it hurts. Any time we see Walt in class, it’s certain that what he writes on the chalkboard will echo events in his secret life.
2013 August 12, Stephen Bowie, “The case against Breaking Bad”, in The A.V. Club
The song is sumptuously introspective, but on first impression it's a bit too on the nose.
2013 August 19, Marc Hogan, “The Weeknd and Drake ‘Live For’ Whining About Success”, in SPIN
[…] these days there is a long tradition of ships named Warspite, most famously the Queen Elizabeth-class battleship, but when you actually look at the etymology of the name, it is literally "war's spite", the spite of war, which, again, is, um, a little bit on the nose for a ship full of nuclear death.
2021 June 23, Drachinifel, 56:59 from the start, in The Drydock - Episode 150, archived from the original on 5 November 2022
Unfortunately, [Cormac McCarthy] won’t win because of the ammoniac mist rising up from the marsh in the inexplicable darkness, the jagged, sepulchral mountains stabbing the horizon, and also because the lead characters of his new books are named Bobby and Alicia Western—simply too on the nose.
2022 October 3, Alex Shephard, “Who Will Win the 2022 Nobel Prize in Literature?”, in The New Republic
Perhaps we should be thanking La Vie. By producing something entirely too on the nose, they’ve shown green consumerism for the utterly uninspiring vision it presents: not only totally inadequate for stopping climate change, but a modified version of the same crap we’ve been eating for years.
2022 November 9, Simon Childs, “Why Is This Vegan Bacon Advert So Annoying?”, in Novara Media
(slang, Australia, often figurative) Smelly, malodorous.
Quotations
Now the process has been reversed; it is doubtful if there has ever been a time when politicians and politics have been more on the nose than the period of the first Fraser government, and this is not only unfunny, but unhealthy.
1977, Mungo MacCallum, Mungo's Canberra, University of Queensland Press, page 198
Conservatism was on the nose with voters and if Liberals were to regain government, the party must swing smoothly to the left on a range of social issues.
2008 November, Janet Albrechtsen, “Romanticising Australian Conservatism”, in Eric Beecher, editor, The Best Australian Political Writing 2009, Melbourne University Publishing, published 2009, page 236