(athletics) In long jump, javelin and similar events, little mark alongside the runway which helps the athlete to set their steps just right for their performance.
An outdoor sport in which teams of players use GPS receivers to find and visit randomly selected "dashpoints" around the world and report on what they find.
The time it takes to finish a race from when the starter's gun (or other signal) is sounded until crossing the finish line, irrespective of when the competitor actually starts.
Alternative form of hackeysack [A non-competition sport in which a small sack, or "hack", full of rice or sand is kept from falling to the ground by using any part of the body except the arms.]
Alternative form of jumping jack [A physical exercise performed by jumping to a position with the legs spread wide and the hands touching overhead and then returning to a position with the feet together and the arms at the sides.]
Alternative form of noughts and crosses [(UK, Australia, New Zealand, games) A two-player game played on a three-by-three grid, in which players take it in turns to place their respective symbol (either a nought or a cross) in a cell of the grid, the objective being to form a row, column or diagonal of three of one's own symbol.]
Alternative form of Ouija [(countable) A board, having letters of the alphabet and the words yes and no; used with a planchette during a seance to "communicate" with spirits.]
(sports) Alternative form of race card [(sports) A printed card or pamphlet giving information about a series of horse races and listing the horses to be run; a racebook.]
(often attributive) A card sent out by a travelling dance or theatre company to request temporary personnel from a local labor union.
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