athletics

athletics
athletics, sports, games denote physical activities engaged in for exercise or play.
Athletics is a collective term (not used in the singular) for exercises for the performance of which one acquires and maintains agility, skill, stamina by regular and systematic training and practice usually with the aim of competing, singly or as a member of a team, with others similarly trained, whether for pleasure, to keep the body in trim, to win honor for oneself, one’s team, school, or club, or to earn a livelihood
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college athletics include football, basketball, hockey, baseball, rowing, and tennis

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baseball, hockey, football, and tennis are among the better-known professional athletics

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Sports are forms of physical activity, usually outdoor, that afford pleasure or diversion. The term may be used in the singular for any of the various forms of athletics, since whatever the main purpose of athletic activity may be, a certain amount of pleasure is usually derived
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football, basketball, hockey, baseball, rowing, and tennis are among the popular sports with those who go out for athletics in college

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major- league baseball is a professional sport

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The idea of training to develop agility, skill, or stamina, prominent in athletics, is frequently wanting in sports, which may involve so little exertion or be engaged in for so short a period or so infrequently as not to require it; thus, an impromptu baseball game between two pickup teams falls under the head of sport, but hardly of athletics. So also the idea of competition, usually present in athletics, is frequently wanting in sports
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noncompetitive skating, skiing, canoeing, and swimming are sports

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The term is wider than athletics, including such activities as hunting and fishing (in which the pleasure derives from pursuit of quarry). Since sports contests are often an object of interest to others, the term sports is applied also to contests which provide amusement or diversion for spectators as well as or often rather than contestants; horse racing, dog racing, bullfighting, and cockfighting are sports
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we . . . have every source of amusement open to us, and yet follow these cruel sportsWindham

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Games (for singular see FUN) are athletic or sports contests, usually those which are of a somewhat artificial nature and therefore require more extensive rules than such contests as rowing, boxing, wrestling, and skiing. Thus, practically all forms of competition that make use of a ball or similar object are called games (as baseball, football, hockey, golf, tennis, and polo). Although the plural games may be used interchangeably with meet of a competition consisting chiefly or only of track-and-field events
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Olympic games

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the singular game is applied to few of the individual events of such a competition.

New Dictionary of Synonyms. 2014.

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  • Athletics — d Oakland Oakland Athletics Fondation 1901 Ligue …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Athletics — may refer to:* Track and field athletics, a sport, comprising a group of athletic events or disciplines, each of which involves either running, walking, throwing or jumping ** UK Athletics, the governing body for the sport of athletics in the… …   Wikipedia

  • Athletics — Ath*let ics, n. The art of training by athletic exercises; the games and sports of athletes. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • athletics — c.1730, from ATHLETIC (Cf. athletic); also see ICS (Cf. ics). Probably formed on model of gymnastics …   Etymology dictionary

  • athletics — [n] sports contest, drill, events, exercises, games, practice, races, recreation, workout; concept 363 …   New thesaurus

  • athletics — [ath let′iks] pl.n. [sometimes with sing. v.] sports, games, exercises, etc. requiring physical strength, skill, stamina, speed, etc …   English World dictionary

  • athletics — /ath let iks/, n. 1. (usually used with a pl. v.) athletic sports, as running, rowing, or boxing. 2. Brit. track and field events. 3. (usually used with a sing. v.) the practice of athletic exercises; the principles of athletic training. [1595… …   Universalium

  • athletics —    Britain has had a long and proud record in athletics, notably in running, but the 1980s and 1990s saw a decline in performance and public interest, sparking a debate about how best to train top athletes. Most observers accept that athletics… …   Encyclopedia of contemporary British culture

  • athletics — noun 1 (BrE) sports such as running, jumping, etc. ⇨ See also ↑track and field ADJECTIVE ▪ indoor, outdoor ▪ junior, senior ▪ amateur, schools …   Collocations dictionary

  • athletics — [[t]æθle̱tɪks[/t]] 1) N UNCOUNT Athletics refers to track and field sports such as running, the high jump, and the javelin. [mainly BRIT] As the modern Olympics grew in stature, so too did athletics. ...the International Amateur Athletics… …   English dictionary

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