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Definition 2024
Rugby
Rugby
See also: rugby
English
Proper noun
Rugby
- A town in Warwickshire, England, where the sport of rugby is thought to have originated.
- A city and county seat in North Dakota.
rugby
rugby
See also: Rugby
English
Alternative forms
Noun
rugby (countable and uncountable, plural rugbies)
- (usually uncountable) A sport where players can hold or kick an ovoid ball. The ball cannot be handled forwards and points are scored by touching the ball to the ground in the area past their opponent’s territory or kicking the ball between goalposts and over a crossbar.
- The scrum is a distinctive element of rugby.
- The two rugbies split following a debate about amateurism.
- (countable) A loose fitting shirt with a collar, as worn by rugby players.
- 2003, B. Lawson Thornton, Misery Loves Company: The Diary of Kerri Mitchell, East River Press (ISBN 9780974018300)
- I don't know why, but for some reason people who work undercover for department store security always wear rugbies and khakis.
- 2007, Adam Mansbach, Angry Black White Boy: A Novel, Crown (ISBN 9780307419798), page 69
- Jansports and cargo pants were everywhere, set off with overstated polos, rugbies, and sweatshirts blaring the logos of hip hop designers.
- 2015, Tony Jackson, FROM THE STREETS TO THE SHEETS, Page Publishing Inc (ISBN 9781634171519)
- I bought three jogging suits, a pair of Polo sneakers, and two rugbies.
- 2003, B. Lawson Thornton, Misery Loves Company: The Diary of Kerri Mitchell, East River Press (ISBN 9780974018300)
Usage notes
Rugby is commonly used to refer specifically to the game of rugby union – for example, the Rugby World Cup is a rugby union tournament. Referring to rugby league simply as rugby is less common outside the sport's strongholds.
Synonyms
Hyponyms
- rugby league, league
- rugby union, RU, union
- rugby sevens, rugby 7s
- rugby tens, rugby 10s, ten-a-side rugby, 10-a-side rugby, ten-a-side, 10-a-side
- rugby fifteens, rugby 15s
- (obsolete) Canadian rules rugby (now evolved into Canadian football )
- (obsolete) American rules ruby / Harvard rules football (now evolved into American football )
Derived terms
Terms derived from rugby
Translations
a sport where players can hold or kick an ovoid ball
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See also
Cebuano
Etymology 1
From Rugby, (a brand of rubber cement by Bostik)
Noun
rugby
- rubber cement, contact cement
Etymology 2
Noun
rugby
- the sport of rugby
Czech
Alternative forms
Etymology
Borrowing from English rugby (sport).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈragbɪ/
- Hyphenation: rug‧by
Noun
rugby n (indeclinable)
- rugby [20th c.]
- 2006, Luboš Jeřábek (transl.), Fotbal – velký lexikon, Praha: Grada Publishing, translation of Fussball-Lexikon by Bernd Rohr and Günter Simon, ISBN 80-247-1158-3, page 10:
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Ve škole v Rugby zakládá W. W. Ellis hru rugby (zvanou také rugbyfotbal, na rozdíl od pozdějšího asociačního fotbalu), při které je dovoleno hrát i rukama.
- W. W. Ellis founds a game called rugby (or rugby football, in contrast to later founded association football), in which it is allowed to play with hands, at a school in Rugby.
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Ve škole v Rugby zakládá W. W. Ellis hru rugby (zvanou také rugbyfotbal, na rozdíl od pozdějšího asociačního fotbalu), při které je dovoleno hrát i rukama.
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Derived terms
- rugbista
- rugbyový
Portuguese
Alternative forms
Etymology
Pronunciation
- (Brazil) IPA(key): /ˈʁɐɡ.bi/
Noun
rugby m (uncountable)