- Athletic pastime - Cricket, e.g. - Game played in Southport - Physical activity - Recreation - Tennis, cricket, golf or football - That which diverts, and makes mirth; pastime; amusement.
- hold down a job - Labour - Occupation - Operate - Planned move - Run smoothly - Exertion of strength or faculties; physical or intellectual
effort directed to an end; industrial activity; toil; employment;
sometimes, specifically, physically labor.
- Batter up - Batter up, e.g - Dedicated sportsperson - Jumper, for instance, let heat out - Mo Farah, for example - Olympic competitor - Some one who trains for and competes in sport
- Adroitness - Manual skill - Right-handedness. - Readiness and grace in physical activity; skill and ease
in using the hands; expertness in manual acts; as, dexterity with the
chisel. - Readiness in the use or control of the mental powers;
quickness and skill in managing any complicated or difficult affair;
adroitness.
- Current feeling of excited anticipation - Excitement - Feeling of excitement - It has the power to be shocking - Type of power - Vibrancy - A power in nature, a manifestation of energy,
exhibiting itself when in disturbed equilibrium or in activity by a
circuit movement, the fact of direction in which involves polarity, or
opposition of properties in opposite directions; also, by attraction
for many substances, by a law involving attraction between surfaces of
unlike polarity, and repulsion between those of like; by exhibiting
accumulated polar tension when the circuit is broken; and by producing
heat, light, concussion, and often chemical changes when the circuit
passes between the poles or through any imperfectly conducting
substance or space. It is generally brought into action by any
disturbance of molecular equilibrium, whether from a chemical,
physical, or mechanical, cause.