sports |
1. n. plural of sport | |
2. v. third-person singular present indicative of sport | |
3. v. To participate in sports; typically used by a person with little interest in the subject to derisively elide details of the activity in question. | |
sidespin |
1. n. Rotation around a vertical axis that makes a ball or other object curve in flight | |
When a right-handed golfer hits a ball with a clockwise sidespin (when viewed from the top), it is called a fade or if extreme a slice and the flight of the ball will curve to the right. | |
When a right-handed golfer hits a ball with an anticlockwise sidespin (when viewed from the top), it is called a draw or if extreme a hook and the flight of the ball will curve to the left. | |
English |
1. adj. Of or pertaining to England. | |
2. adj. English-language; of or pertaining to the language, descended from Anglo-Saxon, which developed in England. | |
Those immigrants Anglicised their names to make them sound more English. | |
3. adj. Of or pertaining to the people of England (to Englishmen and Englishwomen). | |
4. adj. Of or pertaining to the avoirdupois system of measure. | |
an English ton | |
5. adj. (Amish) Non-Amish, so named for speaking English rather than a variety of German. | |
6. n. (collective plural) The people of England; Englishmen and Englishwomen. | |
The Scottish and the English have a history of conflict. | |
7. n. The language originating in England but now spoken in all parts of the British Isles, the Commonwealth of Nations, North America, and other parts of the world. | |
English is spoken here as an unofficial language and lingua franca. | |
How do you say ‘à peu près’ in English? | |
8. n. (Amish, collective plural) The non-Amish; non-Amish people. | |
9. n. One's ability to employ the English language correctly. | |
My coworker has pretty good English for a non-native speaker. | |
10. n. The English-language term or expression for something. | |
What's the English for ‘à peu près’? | |
11. n. Specific language or wording in English; English text or statements in speech, whether in translation or otherwise. | |
The technical details are correct, but the English is not very clear. | |
12. n. A variety or dialect of spoken and or written English. | |
13. n. (printing, dated) The size of type between pica and great primer, standardized as 14-point. | |
14. n. (North American) Spin or side given to a ball, especially in pool or billiards. | |
Put more English on the ball. | |
15. v. (transitive, archaic) To translate, adapt or render into English. | |
16. n. (US) Spinning or rotary motion given to a ball around the vertical axis, as in billiards or bowling. | |
You can't hit it directly, but maybe if you give it some english. | |
17. n. (figurative) An unusual or unexpected interpretation of a text or idea, a spin, a nuance. | |