Track and field event

•To raze.•A root.•The descendants of a common ancestor; a family, tribe, people, or nation, believed or presumed to belong to the same stock; a lineage; a breed.•Company; herd; breed.•A variety of such fixed character that it may be propagated by seed.•Peculiar flavor, taste, or strength, as of wine; that quality, or assemblage of qualities, which indicates origin or kind, as in wine; hence, characteristic flavor; smack.•Hence, characteristic quality or disposition.•A progress; a course; a movement or progression.•Esp., swift progress; rapid course; a running.•Hence: The act or process of running in competition; a contest of speed in any way, as in running, riding, driving, skating, rowing, sailing; in the plural, usually, a meeting for contests in the running of horses; as, he attended the races.•Competitive action of any kind, especially when prolonged; hence, career; course of life.•A strong or rapid current of water, or the channel or passage for such a current; a powerful current or heavy sea, sometimes produced by the meeting of two tides; as, the Portland Race; the Race of Alderney.•The current of water that turns a water wheel, or the channel in which it flows; a mill race.•A channel or guide along which a shuttle is driven back and forth, as in a loom, sewing machine, etc.•To run swiftly; to contend in a race; as, the animals raced over the ground; the ships raced from port to port.•To run too fast at times, as a marine engine or screw, when the screw is lifted out of water by the action of a heavy sea.•To cause to contend in a race; to drive at high speed; as, to race horses.•To run a race with.

ncG1vNJzZmickZ65uq%2FEpZybqpmpxqS%2BzqyqsKeimXuku8xoq6uZk6B6orrDZp2inZyZeqbCxKerZ6Ckork%3D

 Share!