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单词 marathon
释义

marathonn.

Brit. /ˈmarəθ(ə)n/, U.S. /ˈmɛrəˌθɑn/
Forms: also with capital initial.
Origin: A borrowing from Greek. Etymon: Greek Μαραθών.
Etymology: < ancient Greek Μαραθών, name of a deme on the north-east coast of Attica in Greece, the site of an Athenian victory over an invading Persian army in 490 b.c.Herodotus ( History vi) records that the herald Pheidippides ran the 150 miles from Athens to Sparta to secure aid before the battle, but the distance of the modern race was based on a later tradition that a messenger ran from Marathon to Athens (22 miles) with news of victory, but fell dead on arrival. The first marathon race of modern times was run at the 1896 Olympics. The present distance of 26 miles 385 yards has been run at the Olympics since 1908, but was not officially adopted as the standard until later. Sense 2 has given rise to the suffix -athon comb. form.
1. A long-distance running race, usually of 26 miles 385 yards (42·195 km). Also: a race of this length in swimming, etc. Frequently attributive (esp. in marathon race, marathon run).Cf. also half marathon n.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > racing or race > racing on foot > [noun] > racing specific distance
dash1836
middle distance1885
marathon1896
miling1913
four-minute mile1955
ultra1977
ultra-running1978
ultra-run1986
1896 Fortn. Rev. June 950 We now come to the great glory of the Greeks—the victory in the Marathon Race.
1904 Jrnl. Nerv. & Mental Dis. 31 94 A ‘Marathon run’ in Boston.
1908 Westm. Gaz. 22 July 1/3 There are two things which no one who wishes to win the Marathon can ever afford to forget.
1914 S. Lewis Our Mr. Wrenn xiii. 173 One of the young clerks in the store had done fine in the Modified Marathon.
1932 G. Morton Myst. Hermit's End ii. 19 The latter was taking intensive training for marathon swimming. That form of sport had caught on of late.
1936 ‘R. West’ Thinking Reed iii. 89 He had strode through the twenty-four hours at the pace of a Marathon race.
1964 M. Watman Encycl. Athletics 108/1 Owing to the disparity in the nature, if not distance, of various courses, marathon times should not be taken too seriously.
1989 Oxf. Times Sept. Limited Edition Suppl. 11/3 The marathon itself (just over 26 miles) is..not to be taken lightly.
1997 K. Reichs Déjà Dead xi. 134 My battered legs trembled as though I'd just run a marathon.
2. Any long-distance race, competition, or event calling for endurance, esp. one undertaken in order to raise money or publicize a cause.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > sport > match or competition > [noun] > types of
all comersc1450
after-gamea1500
fore-game1594
revenge1616
plate1639
set-to1743
return match1753
bye1754
scrub-race1791
anybody's game (also race, match)1826
return1834
barney1843
bonspiel1858
handicap1861
pennant1865
home-and-home1868
benefit match1871
run-off1873
international1877
American tournament1878
Grand Prix1879
single1884
friendly1885
all-comers1889
pair1890
championship1893
round robin1894
replay1895
Olympiad1896
junior varsity1902
lightning tournament1903
rematch1903
road trip1903
pickup1905
freestyle1906
marathon1908
test1908
Derby1909
scrimmage1910
eliminator1911
twosome1911
triala1914
quadrangular1916
slug-fest1916
varsity match1921
needle contest1922
curtain jerker1923
needle match1923
open1926
needle fight1927
knock-out1928
shirt1930
masters1933
pro-amateur1934
tune-up1934
World Cup1934
pro-am1937
state1941
sizzler1942
runathon1943
mismatch1954
run-out1955
match-up1959
squeaker1961
triple-header1961
Super Bowl1967
invitational1968
needle game1970
major1976
slobberknocker1986
1908 Daily Chron. 5 Nov. 1/2 A competition..under a title of ‘The Murphy Marathon’ was decided last night... It was intended that the contestants should..peel a quarter of a hundredweight of potatoes.
1928 Daily Express 2 July 11/5 The dance marathon here ended at midnight, nine couples left in the competition stopping together after twenty days of continuous dancing.
1968 Radio Times 28 Nov. 8/3 The London-Sydney Motor Marathon. Progress Reports.
1975 New Yorker 10 Mar. 100/2 It's an album of pictures: line dancing, marathon dancing, the Lindy.
1981 Nordic Skiing Jan. 9/1 The event is one of eight marathons for citizen racers which comprise the Great American Ski Chase.
1993 New Scientist 21 Aug. 5/2 During the charity dance marathon, the DJ played only three heavy metal records suitable for headbanging.
3. In extended use: an event or activity of especially long duration, or indulged in to excess. Frequently attributive.
ΘΚΠ
the world > time > duration > [noun] > long duration or lasting through time > something having long duration
a work of time1622
perennial1748
marathon1915
1915 ‘Bartimeus’ Tall Ship x. 185 ‘That was a bit of a Marathon, wasn't it?’ He measured the distance across the lawn with a humorous eye.
1949 Sun (Baltimore) 13 Oct. 18/3 A bit breathless from the ten-day marathon of sloganeering.
1951 N.Y. Herald-Tribune 29 Nov. 3 The House of Commons finally went home..after sitting through a marathon session of 20 hours and 20 minutes.
1967 Listener 3 Aug. 141/2 The spirited exchange of letters between Bernard Shaw, Julian Huxley and others..—referred to in the office as the metabiological marathon.
1971 Britannica Bk. of Year 1970 779/2 Marathon, specif., a group session in which members remain together for an extended period (as 24 hours) and interact openly and responsively so as to increase self-understanding.
1972 Daily Tel. 2 June 2/3 The question whether a judge and special assessors should replace the conventional jury in complicated and marathon criminal cases.
1981 G. Priestland At Large (1983) 107 So is the gradual conversion of Christmas from a winter festival of family reunion into a TV-watching marathon.
1995 Unique June 32/2 I had just started having sex with Steve when we had a marathon sex session in my room.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2000; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

marathonv.

Brit. /ˈmarəθ(ə)n/, U.S. /ˈmɛrəˌθɑn/
Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: marathon n.
Etymology: < marathon n.
rare.
intransitive. To run in or as in a marathon race.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > racing or race > racing on foot > race on foot [verb (intransitive)] > types of foot racing
steeplechase1883
hurdle1896
marathon1920
1920 Chambers's Jrnl. Aug. 519/2 Do I have to marathon ten miles and back?
2001 Independent (Nexis) 20 Oct. I'd boxercised, marathoned and spun until my ‘buns’ were steely.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2000; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
<
n.1896v.1920
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