释义 |
wakeboarding, n. Brit. |ˈweɪkbɔːdiŋ|, U.S. |ˈweɪkˌbɔrdɪŋ| [‹ wakeboard n. + -ing suffix1.] The sport or practice of coasting on the surface of water, or performing acrobatic stunts and manoeuvres, by riding on a short, wide board resembling a surfboard whilst being towed by a motorized craft. Quot. 1966 refers to a similar sport in which the rider is propelled by the wake of a motor boat rather than towed.
1966N.Y. Times 8 May s11/2 Wake boarding, a relatively new water sport, consists of riding without tow atop a modified surfboard on the wake of a power-driven boat. 1991Seattle Times (Nexis) 2 July f/1 Skiboarding? Skurfing? Maybe wakeboarding?.. What would you call the activity performed by someone whose feet are strapped to a surfboard and who bobs behind the wake of a speedboat? 1995Daily Mail Holiday Action Summer 9/2 Imagine leaping up to 25ft in the air, turning somersaults as if launched from a trampoline and performing contortionist tricks like the chicken salad grab—or just drifting from side to side behind a speedboat hopping over its wash. Well that's wakeboarding, the radical alternative to waterskiing. 1996Daily Tel. (Nexis) 2 Sept. 16 The latest crazes are wakeboarding and kneeboarding, where the skier is positioned side-on like a surfer. 2000Brit. Waterskier Sept.–Oct. 31/1 (advt.) High-end training for water skiing and wakeboarding. |