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Bowling   /bˈoʊlɪŋ/   Listen
Bowling

noun
1.
A game in which balls are rolled at an object or group of objects with the aim of knocking them over or moving them.
2.
(cricket) the act of delivering a cricket ball to the batsman.
3.
The playing of a game of tenpins or duckpins etc.



Bowl

verb
(past & past part. bowled; pres. part. bowling)
1.
Roll (a ball).
2.
Hurl a cricket ball from one end of the pitch towards the batsman at the other end.
3.
Engage in the sport of bowling.



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"Bowling" Quotes from Famous Books



... not wonder at your wonderings. Life is a long road; and he must have travelled a very little way indeed who expects that it should be all a bowling-green. Pursue your route in which direction you will, law, trade, physic, or divinity, and prove to me that you will never have occasion to shake off the dust from your feet in testimony against ...
— The Adventures of Hugh Trevor • Thomas Holcroft

... little island of S. Giorgio it is but a stone's throw to the larger island of the Giudecca, with its factories and warehouses and stevedores, and tiny cafes each with a bowling alley at the back. The Giudecca, which looks so populous, is however only skin deep; almost immediately behind the long busy facade of the island are gardens, and then the shallow lagoon stretching for miles, where fishermen are mysteriously employed, day and night. The gardens are restful ...
— A Wanderer in Venice • E.V. Lucas

... on. What virtues can we reasonably suppose to be developed by games? First I should put physical courage. It certainly requires courage to collar a fast and heavy opponent at football, to fall on the ball at the feet of a charging pack or to stand up to fast bowling on a bumpy wicket. Schoolboy opinion is rightly intolerant of a "funk," and we should not attach too small a value to this first of the manly virtues. Considering as we must the virtues which we are to develop in a nation, we realise that for the security of the nation courage in her young men is ...
— Cambridge Essays on Education • Various

... place of worship, which in their language is called A-fia-tou-ca, we desired to return; but, instead of conducting us to the water-side as we expected, they struck into a road leading into the country. This road, which was about sixteen feet broad, and as level as a bowling-green, seemed to be a very public one; there being many other roads from different parts, leading into it, all inclosed on each side, with neat fences made of reeds, and shaded from the scorching sun by fruit trees, I thought I was transported into the most fertile plains in ...
— A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels, Volume 14 • Robert Kerr

... the judge's presence my uncle, after two or three sea-bows, expressed himself in this manner; "Your servant, your servant. What cheer, father? what cheer? I suppose you don't know me—mayhap you don't. My name is Tom Bowling, and this here boy, you look as if you did not know him neither; 'tis like you mayn't. He's new rigged, i'faith; his cloth don't shake in the wind so much as it wont to do. 'Tis my nephew, d'y see, Roderick ...
— The Adventures of Roderick Random • Tobias Smollett


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