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Football   /fˈʊtbˌɔl/   Listen
noun
football  n.  
1.
An inflated ball to be kicked in sport, usually made in India rubber, or a bladder incased in Leather. Note: The American football is an oblate spheroid, with pointed ends. In other countries, the football is the same as a soccer ball. The games played with the two different balls are different. In the United States, the game played with a soccer ball is called soccer.
2.
The game played with a football (1), by two opposing teams of players moving the ball between goals at opposite ends of a rectangular playing field. Outside the United States football refers to soccer, and in England, also to rugby, but in the United States the shape of the ball and the rules of the game are different.
3.
Soccer or rugby. (Brit.)
4.
(fig.) Something which is treated in a rough manner, usually as part of a dispute; as, a political football.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Football" Quotes from Famous Books



... the senior class of Oxonian students had conquered the senior class of Cambridge at a great game of inter-college football and the cheers and yells of Oxford bloods permeated ...
— Shakspere, Personal Recollections • John A. Joyce

... that sort, nor the "Swiss Family Robinson," nor any of the old books. There is a rattling story called "Kidnapped," by H. Rider Haggard, but it is only five shillings, so if you thought of it you could make up the six shillings by giving me a football belt. Last year you gave me "The Formation of Character," and I read it with great mental improvement and all that, but this time I want a change, namely, (1) not a fairy tale, (2) not an old book, (3) not mental improvement ...
— My Lady Nicotine - A Study in Smoke • J. M. Barrie

... the urn And mild domestic muffin. To the Parks Drags the slow Ladies' School, consuming time In passing given points. Here glow the lamps, And tea-spoons clatter to the cosy hum Of scientific circles. Here resounds The football-field with its discordant train, The crowd that cheers but not discriminates, As ever into touch the ball returns And shrieks the whistle, while the game proceeds With fine irregularity well worth The paltry shilling.— Draw the curtains close While I resume the night-cap dear to all Familiar ...
— Green Bays. Verses and Parodies • Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch

... Capacity to share the same intellectual work may be a very pleasant addition to marriage, but it is no essential. What a man wants is that his wife shall be on his side in his pursuits. A boy does not require that his mother shall be able to play football with him, but he does require that she shall care whether his side wins or loses. The wife who is a true mother to her husband, in this sense, need not be concerned because she cannot, let us say, follow his working out of a geometrical proposition. Let her be on his ...
— Woman and Womanhood - A Search for Principles • C. W. Saleeby

... and I think I did meet Miss Stanhope once—at a football game. I'll be glad to meet them again. ...
— The Rover Boys on Land and Sea - The Crusoes of Seven Islands • Arthur M. Winfield


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