The Boy's Modern Playmate: A Book of Sports, Games, and PastimesJohn George Wood Frederick Warne and Company, 1891 - 816 sider |
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Side 33
... adversary , or charge him from behind . A player with his back towards his opponents ' goal cannot claim the ... adversary intentionally . Tripping is throwing an adversary by the use of the leg , or by stooping in front of him ...
... adversary , or charge him from behind . A player with his back towards his opponents ' goal cannot claim the ... adversary intentionally . Tripping is throwing an adversary by the use of the leg , or by stooping in front of him ...
Side 39
... adversaries ' goal - line . Directly the forwards are aware that the ball is no longer between them they separate . Meanwhile , the possessor of the ball is running to touch it down , which must be done by grounding it behind his rivals ...
... adversaries ' goal - line . Directly the forwards are aware that the ball is no longer between them they separate . Meanwhile , the possessor of the ball is running to touch it down , which must be done by grounding it behind his rivals ...
Side 41
... as to keep it constantly within reach . To do this well , with unabated speed , and yet without offering a chance to the adversary , is the ne plus ultra of fine play . 2 Gont HOCKEY . This is perhaps , next to football FOOTBALL . 41.
... as to keep it constantly within reach . To do this well , with unabated speed , and yet without offering a chance to the adversary , is the ne plus ultra of fine play . 2 Gont HOCKEY . This is perhaps , next to football FOOTBALL . 41.
Side 49
... adversary's score , and the game then and there ends by the umpire's decision , the nine having the largest score wins . It is the umpire , and he only , who decides when a game shall end , of course with the exception of the case of ...
... adversary's score , and the game then and there ends by the umpire's decision , the nine having the largest score wins . It is the umpire , and he only , who decides when a game shall end , of course with the exception of the case of ...
Side 54
... adversary , he shall be entitled to that base , and shall not be put out . Section 14. - No player shall be allowed a substitute in running the bases , except for illness or injury incurred in the game then being played ; and such ...
... adversary , he shall be entitled to that base , and shall not be put out . Section 14. - No player shall be allowed a substitute in running the bases , except for illness or injury incurred in the game then being played ; and such ...
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Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
acid adversary allowed ammonia angle bait ball base batsman bird boat body bottom bowl called catch centre colour corolla course cricket diameter distance draw edge fair ball feet fern fingers fish foot four fronds give glass ground head hold hole hook hoop horse inches keep kick kind king leaves left hand legs length lower mandril marble move object opponent ovary pass piece plate play player position practice quoit right hand ring rope roquet rowlock Rugby Union sail score screw shoulder side spore-cases squail square stamens stand stick straight striker string stroke surface taken teetotum thick throw thumb tierce top-mast touch trick tube turn umpire ventriloquism ventriloquist weight wicket wicket-keeper wind wire wood yards zinc
Populære avsnitt
Side 625 - These simple machines are the lever, the wheel and axle, the pulley, the inclined plane, the wedge, and the screw.
Side 61 - ... the right and left courts. On each side of the net, at a distance of 21 feet from it, and parallel with it, are drawn the service lines.
Side 766 - Italian player oi some eminence. Walker says this may be classed as the most brilliant and critical opening known, and recommends the student to play it at every opportunity ; he also throws out the warning that an incorrect move may irrecoverably lose the game. The defence is most difficult to discover in actual play.
Side 48 - In all match games, lines connecting the liome and first bases, and the home and third bases, and also the lines of the striker's and pitcher's positions, shall be marked by the use of chalk or other suitable material, so as to be distinctly seen by the umpire. The...
Side 765 - WHITE. BLACK. 1. P. tO K. 4. i. P. tO K. 4. 2. P. to KB 4. 2. P. takes P. 3. K. Kt. to B. 3- 3- P. to K. Kt. 4. 4. KB to QB 4. 4. K. Kt. P. advances.
Side 7 - When there shall be more than four players on a side, there shall be no bounds. All hits, byes, and overthrows shall then be allowed.
Side 650 - I can take it into another room and there fire spirits of wine with it. If while it is electrifying I put my finger, or a piece of gold which I hold in my hand, to the nail, I receive a shock which stuns my arms and shoulders.
Side 66 - ... decide similarly for the second game. The partner of the player who served in the first game shall serve in the third; the partner of the player who served in the second game shall serve in the fourth, and so on in the same order in all the subsequent games of a set.
Side 5 - Or, if with any part of his person he stop the ball, which, in the opinion of the umpire at the bowler's wicket, shall have been pitched in a straight line from it to the striker's wicket, and would have hit it.