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Meaning of Mark

Mark a player in his own twenty-two may shout 'mark' at the time of catching a ball kicked by an opponent if the catch is successful, a free kick is awarded to the player (rugby union) (chambers. Sports factf.,2005, 493P.) Mark a scoring dart in cricket (darts) mark a spare or strike, so called because of the identifying mark put on the score sheet (bowling) mark if a player marks an opposing player, he or she stays close to that player in order to prevent him/her being effective (football) (chambers. Sports factf.,2005, 261P.) Mark if a player marks the ball, he catches it. If the ball has travelled more than 15m and the ball is caught cleanly, the catcher is entitled to an unimpeded free kick or handpass (austral.Football) (chambers. Sports factf.,2005, 63P.) Mark the spot designated by the referee as the location for a scrum (rugby) mark to guard an opponent closely (hockey) mark in games such as football and hockey, to stay close to an attacking player in the opposing team to prevent the player from receiving the ball or scoring (dict. Of sp. And ex. Sc. 2006, 130P.) Mark in sport disciplines where the performance delivered by an athlete cannot be measured precisely (» cm-g-s system), the term for performance assessment based on judgement and differentiated with a point scale (e.G. In gymnastics, figure- and roller-skating, ice dance, dressage, diving). The rules of the different sport disciplines determine the minimum and maximum number of points as well as possible differentiation into half, tenth, hundredth, and thousands of a point, they also bind the awarding of points by the observance of certain performance criteria. Nevertheless, the possibility of injustice cannot be excluded completely with this method of performance assessment. (H.Haag &g. Haag, dictionary, 2003, 292p.) Marker 1. A dart just outside the required double that helps the aiming of subsequent darts 2. The person who keeps the score (darts) (chambers. Sports factf.,2005, 214P.) Marker 1. An object that marks the forward limits of the teeing ground. 2. A scorer in stroke play, often a fellow competitor. 3. A ball marker 4. A rating marker (golf)

 

Source: http://lspa.eu/files/study/lection_materials/U.Svinks/Sport_lexis_terms_explanatory_dictionary_in_english.pdf

List of Literature and The List of Abbreviations sources used in the source document


1.   Chambers  Sports  Factfinder.  Chambers  Harrap  Publishers  Ltd  2005.  [ISBN  0550  101616] (Chambers. Sports Factf.,2005)
2.   Dictionary  of  Leisure,  Travel  and  Tourism.  Third  edition.  A&C  Black  Publishers  Ltd,  2008. [ISBN 9780713685459] (Dict. of Leis., Trav. and Tour., 2008)
3.   Dictionary. Sport, Physical Education, Sport Science. Editors Herbert Haag&Gerald Haag. Kiel, Institut für Sport und Sportwissenschaften, 2003.  [ISBN 3-7780-3419-7]  ((H.Haag &G. Haag, Dictionary, 2003)
4.   Dictionary   of   Sport   and   Exercise   Science   A&Black   Publishers   Ltd   2006.   [ISBN   -10: 0713677856;   ISBN-13: 9780713677850]  (Dict. of Sp.and Ex.Sc,2006)
5.   Dictionary of the Sport and Exercise Sciences. Mark H.Anshel, Editor. Human Kinetics Books Champaign, Illinois, 1991 [ISBN: 0-87322-379-9] (Dict. of sp. and Ex. Sc. 1991)

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