TACKLES - Definition. Was ist TACKLES
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Was (wer) ist TACKLES - definition

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Football tackle; Tackling; Tackle (football); Tackles; Tackle (disambiguation)

tackle         
(tackles, tackling, tackled)
Frequency: The word is one of the 3000 most common words in English.
1.
If you tackle a difficult problem or task, you deal with it in a very determined or efficient way.
The first reason to tackle these problems is to save children's lives...
VERB: V n
2.
If you tackle someone in a game such as hockey or football, you try to take the ball away from them. If you tackle someone in rugby or American football, you knock them to the ground.
Foley tackled the quarterback.
VERB: V n
Tackle is also a noun.
...a tackle by full-back Brian Burrows.
N-COUNT
3.
If you tackle someone about a particular matter, you speak to them honestly about it, usually in order to get it changed or done.
I tackled him about how anyone could live amidst so much poverty.
= confront
VERB: V n about wh/n
4.
If you tackle someone, you attack them and fight them.
He claims Pasolini overtook and tackled him, pushing him into the dirt.
VERB: V n
5.
Tackle is the equipment that you need for a sport or activity, especially fishing.
...fishing tackle.
N-UNCOUNT
tackle         
¦ noun
1. the equipment required for a task or sport.
2. a mechanism consisting of ropes, pulley blocks, and hooks for lifting heavy objects.
the running rigging and pulleys used to work a boat's sails.
3. (in sport) an act of tackling an opponent.
4. American Football a player who lines up next to the end along the line of scrimmage.
5. (also wedding tackle) Brit. vulgar slang a man's genitals.
¦ verb
1. make determined efforts to deal with (a difficult task).
initiate discussion with (someone) about a sensitive issue.
2. (in soccer, hockey, rugby, etc.) intercept (an opponent in possession of the ball).
Derivatives
tackler noun
Origin
ME: prob. from Mid. Low Ger. takel, from taken 'lay hold of'.
tackle         
I. n.
1.
Pulley.
2.
Equipment, gear, rigging, tackling, furniture, implements, apparatus.
3.
Harness, tackling.
4.
Weapons, instruments of action.
II. v. a.
(Local and Colloq.)
1.
Harness.
2.
Attack, seize, lay hold of, seize upon.

Wikipedia

Tackle

Tackle may refer to:

  • In football:
    • Tackle (football move), a play in various forms of football
    • Tackle (gridiron football position), a position in American football and Canadian football
    • Dump tackle, a forceful move in rugby of picking up an opposing player and throwing them to the ground
    • The Tackle, a term for the final play of Super Bowl XXXIV
    • Sliding tackle, a tackle in association football
  • Fishing tackle, the gear or equipment used when fishing
  • An assembly of pulleys with a rope threaded through them; see block and tackle
  • Tackle (Transformers), a fictional character
Beispiele aus Textkorpus für TACKLES
1. Very little development activity tackles this head–on.
2. There could be two–footed tackles in the directors box.
3. Saawan Kumar’s Saaawan–The Love Season tackles a novel theme.
4. For example, Surah 2 contains 286 verses and tackles many subjects.
5. "Then you see the tackles that have occurred over the last weekend.