Talk:Piggyback
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The following used to be on the list:
- A Canadian Reader's Digest article mentioned one contract piggybacking on another. In this context, it meant the person for whom the contract was negotiated received the exact same benefits (and drawbacks) as the person to whose contract it was tied.
This seems highly circumstantial and not widespread enough for inclusion. Are there other examples of this use? If so, it should be added sans the source, which makes it sound like Wikipedia is in the business of cataloging every misuse of a word made by a popular magazine.