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athletics |
Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.06 sec. |
athleticsor track and field also track-and-field gamesVariety of sport competitions held on a running track and on the adjacent field. It is the oldest form of organized sports, having been a part of the ancient Olympic Games from c. 776 BC to AD 393. Modern events include various sprint and middle- and long-distance races, relay races, hurdling, steeplechase, high jump, pole vault, long jump, triple jump, shot put, discus throw, hammer throw, javelin throw, decathlon, pentathlon, and heptathlon. Cross-country running, marathons, and speed walking, which are rarely held on a track, are usually considered adjuncts of athletics. Events are held indoors and outdoors, and records are kept separately; some events are modified or eliminated for indoor competition. |
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? Mentioned in | ? References in periodicals archive | |
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00 or more for the privilege of enjoying the spectacle of a high school athletic contest. If the discipline of the Spartans was to prepare for war, and if the exercises of the Greek athlete were to prepare him for the athletic contest, the asceticism of the pre-Easter Jesus movement was similarly a strategy to meet a specific goal. My school's track-and-field team, on which I was the javelin thrower, had traveled by train from Budapest to Prague, Czechoslovakia, where we competed in an athletic contest. |
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