Sport - significado y definición. Qué es Sport
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Qué (quién) es Sport - definición

FORMER AMERICAN SPORTS MAGAZINE
SPORT magazine; SPORT Magazine; SPORT; The SPORT Award; SPORT (magazine); SPORT (US magazine)

sport         
  • International level female athletes at [[ISTAF Berlin]], 2006
  • Spectators at the 1906 unofficial Olympic Games
  • Motorised sports]] have appeared since the advent of the modern age.
  • The [[International Olympic Committee]] recognises some board games as sports including [[chess]].
  • ''Marathon International de Paris'' (Paris Marathon)]] in 2014.
  • Horse racing
  • The [[2005 London Marathon]]: running races, in their various specialties, represent the oldest and most traditional form of sport.
  • The foot race was one of the events dedicated to Zeus. Panathenaic amphora, Kleophrades painter, circa 500 BC, Louvre museum.
  • warm-up exercise]] prior to entering the pool in a U.S. military base, 2011.
  • Roman]] bronze reduction of [[Myron]]'s [[Discobolos]], 2nd century AD
  • equestrian]] sport
  • These lights at the [[Melbourne Cricket Ground]] indicate the decision the third umpire makes following a review.
  • Women's volleyball team of a U.S. university
FORMS OF COMPETITIVE ACTIVITY, USUALLY PHYSICAL
SportS; Sports; Sporting event; Athletic contests; Recreational sport; Technology in sports; Spoirts; Organized sport; Sports Fitness; Sporting events; Athletic activity; Culture of sport; Sport culture; Sport event; Sport events; Sports event; Sports events; Playing Sport; Playing sport; Sport discipline; Sport disciplines; Sports discipline; Religious views on sports; Sports organisations; Sports organizations; Sports and religion; Religion and sports; Christian views on sports; Sports and games; Christianity and sports; Sports and Christianity
(sports)
Frequency: The word is one of the 1500 most common words in English.
1.
Sports are games such as football and basketball and other competitive leisure activities which need physical effort and skill.
I'd say football is my favourite sport...
She excels at sport...
Billy turned on a radio to get the sports news.
N-VAR
2.
If you say that someone is a sport or a good sport, you mean that they cope with a difficult situation or teasing in a cheerful way. (OLD-FASHIONED)
He was accused of having no sense of humor, of not being a good sport.
N-COUNT [approval]
sport         
  • International level female athletes at [[ISTAF Berlin]], 2006
  • Spectators at the 1906 unofficial Olympic Games
  • Motorised sports]] have appeared since the advent of the modern age.
  • The [[International Olympic Committee]] recognises some board games as sports including [[chess]].
  • ''Marathon International de Paris'' (Paris Marathon)]] in 2014.
  • Horse racing
  • The [[2005 London Marathon]]: running races, in their various specialties, represent the oldest and most traditional form of sport.
  • The foot race was one of the events dedicated to Zeus. Panathenaic amphora, Kleophrades painter, circa 500 BC, Louvre museum.
  • warm-up exercise]] prior to entering the pool in a U.S. military base, 2011.
  • Roman]] bronze reduction of [[Myron]]'s [[Discobolos]], 2nd century AD
  • equestrian]] sport
  • These lights at the [[Melbourne Cricket Ground]] indicate the decision the third umpire makes following a review.
  • Women's volleyball team of a U.S. university
FORMS OF COMPETITIVE ACTIVITY, USUALLY PHYSICAL
SportS; Sports; Sporting event; Athletic contests; Recreational sport; Technology in sports; Spoirts; Organized sport; Sports Fitness; Sporting events; Athletic activity; Culture of sport; Sport culture; Sport event; Sport events; Sports event; Sports events; Playing Sport; Playing sport; Sport discipline; Sport disciplines; Sports discipline; Religious views on sports; Sports organisations; Sports organizations; Sports and religion; Religion and sports; Christian views on sports; Sports and games; Christianity and sports; Sports and Christianity
I. n.
1.
Play, diversion, amusement, pastime, game, fun, frolic, gambol, prank, recreation, gayety, entertainment, merriment, mirth, jollity, joviality, pleasantry, merry-making.
2.
Amusement, entertainment, diversion.
3.
Recreation.
4.
Jest, joke.
5.
Mockery, derision, mock, ridicule, contemptuous mirth, jeer.
6.
Toy, plaything.
7.
Play, idle jingle.
8.
Monstrosity, lusus naturae.
9.
Wantonness, looseness, amorous dallying.
II. v. n.
1.
Play, frolic, disport, wanton, skip, frisk, romp, caper, make fun, make merry.
2.
Trifle.
III. v. a.
(Colloq.) Exhibit, display, make a show of.
Sport         
  • International level female athletes at [[ISTAF Berlin]], 2006
  • Spectators at the 1906 unofficial Olympic Games
  • Motorised sports]] have appeared since the advent of the modern age.
  • The [[International Olympic Committee]] recognises some board games as sports including [[chess]].
  • ''Marathon International de Paris'' (Paris Marathon)]] in 2014.
  • Horse racing
  • The [[2005 London Marathon]]: running races, in their various specialties, represent the oldest and most traditional form of sport.
  • The foot race was one of the events dedicated to Zeus. Panathenaic amphora, Kleophrades painter, circa 500 BC, Louvre museum.
  • warm-up exercise]] prior to entering the pool in a U.S. military base, 2011.
  • Roman]] bronze reduction of [[Myron]]'s [[Discobolos]], 2nd century AD
  • equestrian]] sport
  • These lights at the [[Melbourne Cricket Ground]] indicate the decision the third umpire makes following a review.
  • Women's volleyball team of a U.S. university
FORMS OF COMPETITIVE ACTIVITY, USUALLY PHYSICAL
SportS; Sports; Sporting event; Athletic contests; Recreational sport; Technology in sports; Spoirts; Organized sport; Sports Fitness; Sporting events; Athletic activity; Culture of sport; Sport culture; Sport event; Sport events; Sports event; Sports events; Playing Sport; Playing sport; Sport discipline; Sport disciplines; Sports discipline; Religious views on sports; Sports organisations; Sports organizations; Sports and religion; Religion and sports; Christian views on sports; Sports and games; Christianity and sports; Sports and Christianity
·noun Play; idle jingle.
II. Sport ·noun A sportsman; a gambler.
III. Sport ·vt To represent by any knd of play.
IV. Sport ·vi To Trifle.
V. Sport ·noun Mock; mockery; contemptuous mirth; derision.
VI. Sport ·noun That which diverts, and makes mirth; pastime; amusement.
VII. Sport ·vt To exhibit, or bring out, in public; to use or wear; as, to sport a new equipage.
VIII. Sport ·vi To practice the diversions of the field or the turf; to be given to betting, as upon races.
IX. Sport ·vi To Play; to Frolic; to Wanton.
X. Sport ·noun That with which one plays, or which is driven about in play; a toy; a plaything; an object of mockery.
XI. Sport ·noun Diversion of the field, as fowling, hunting, fishing, racing, games, and the like, ·esp. when money is staked.
XII. Sport ·vt To Divert; to Amuse; to make merry;
- used with the reciprocal pronoun.
XIII. Sport ·vt To give utterance to in a sportive manner; to throw out in an easy and copious manner;
- with off; as, to sport off epigrams.
XIV. Sport ·vi To assume suddenly a new and different character from the rest of the plant or from the type of the species;
- said of a bud, shoot, plant, or animal. ·see Sport, ·noun, 6.
XV. Sport ·noun A plant or an animal, or part of a plant or animal, which has some peculiarity not usually seen in the species; an abnormal variety or growth. ·see Sporting plant, under Sporting.

Wikipedia

Sport (US magazine)

Sport was an American sports magazine. Launched in September 1946 by New York-based publisher Macfadden Publications, Sport pioneered the generous use of color photography – it carried eight full-color plates in its first edition.

Sport predated the launch of Sports Illustrated by eight years, and is remembered for bringing several editorial innovations to the genre, as well as creating, in 1948, the Sport Magazine Award, given initially to the outstanding player in 11 major sports. In 1955 the magazine instituted an award honoring the outstanding player in baseball's World Series (Johnny Podres of the Brooklyn Dodgers was the inaugural winner); it was later expanded to include the pre-eminent post-season performers in the other three major North American team sports. What made Sport the most distinctive from Sports Illustrated, however, was that it was a monthly magazine as opposed to SI's weekly distribution.

Sport was published continually between its launch and August 2000, when its then-owner, British publisher EMAP PLC, made the decision to close the money-losing title. As of 2016, the photo archive of Sport, which represents one of the most significant collections of 20th-century sports photography in North America, is housed in Canada in Toronto, Ontario and Vancouver, British Columbia at The Sport Gallery.

Ejemplos de uso de Sport
1. Winning in sport, particularly Olympic sport, costs.
2. The extra Sports package gets you Sport 5+, Fox Sport and Extreme Sport.
3. It‘s called a culture of sport, a respect for sport.
4. Politics is not just sport –– but it is partly sport.
5. Top sport award The Observer Sport Monthly has been named as Best Magazine at the Sport Industry Awards.