For instance, neck gaiters are especially popular among runners.
4 reasons you shouldn’t trash your neck gaiter based on the new mask study|Jonathan Lambert|August 12, 2020|Science News
It is also home to the Charlotte Rail Trail, which is popular with runners, walkers, and cyclists.
Charlotte : Celebrating Diversity in the Queen City|LGBTQ-Editor|August 11, 2020|No Straight News
Zwift isn’t brand-new—it’s been around for a few years—and it markets itself as a training app for cyclists, runners, and triathletes.
The Tour de France Is Going Virtual, and It Starts This Weekend|Vanessa Bates Ramirez|July 2, 2020|Singularity Hub
Then her team could also test just how well it would thwart would-be runners.
Physicists foil classic oobleck science trick|Emily Conover|June 9, 2020|Science News For Students
True, runners risk stepping into another person’s cloud of exhaled air.
Six foot social-distancing will not always be enough for COVID-19|Tina Hesman Saey|April 23, 2020|Science News For Students
One runner in Houston now has a permanent, hoof-shaped scar in the center of his forehead.
Chicago’s Running of the Bulls|Hampton Stevens|July 26, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Some, like Smart Socks, measure strike speed and heel placement for runner trying to get that next PR.
Fitness Tracker 101: Everything You Need to Know About Your New Gadget|Megan Humphreys|December 27, 2013|DAILY BEAST
The winner of the first marathon (OK, he was the only runner, but still) died from the effort.
Maybe You Shouldn't Run a Marathon|Kent Sepkowitz|November 3, 2013|DAILY BEAST
Zachary wound up, eyed the runner, then uncorked a sizzling fastball.
Babe Ruth’s Summer of Records|Bill Bryson|September 29, 2013|DAILY BEAST
Rick Santorum, the runner up to Mitt Romney in 2012, was at CPAC likely hoping to continue that tradition.
What Do We Know About 2016 After the CPAC Straw Poll?|Ben Jacobs|March 16, 2013|DAILY BEAST
This is not an abnormal action, but is of necessity, or asphyxia would instantly result and the runner would drop.
Scientific American Supplement No. 275|Various
I think Everett Colby was as good a man interfering for the runner as I have seen.
Football Days|William H. Edwards
The next instant, his sword-point dripping blood, the runner 403 was beyond reach, speeding for the open gate.
Beyond the Frontier|Randall Parrish
Harris punted to Chambers' forty yards and Edwards got the runner neatly.
Left Tackle Thayer|Ralph Henry Barbour
Their skates are a part of them, and every runner seems bewitched.
Hans Brinker|Mary Mapes Dodge
British Dictionary definitions for runner
runner
/ (ˈrʌnə) /
noun
a person who runs, esp an athlete
a messenger for a bank or brokerage firm
an employee of an art or antique dealer who visits auctions to bid on desired lots
a person engaged in the solicitation of business
a person on the run; fugitive
a person or vessel engaged in smuggling; smuggler
(in combination)a rum-runner
a person who operates, manages, or controls something
either of the strips of metal or wood on which a sledge runs
the blade of an ice skate
a roller or guide for a sliding component
a channel through which molten material enters a casting or moulding
the rotating element of a water turbine
another name for running belay
any of various carangid fishes of temperate and tropical seas, such as Caranx crysos (blue runner) of American Atlantic waters
botany
a slender stem with very long internodes, as of the strawberry, that arches down to the ground and propagates by producing roots and shoots at the nodes or tip
a plant that propagates in this way
a strip of lace, linen, etc, placed across a table, dressing table, etc for protection and decoration
a narrow rug or carpet, as for a passage
another word for rocker (def. 3)
do a runnerslangto run away in order to escape trouble or to avoid paying for something
A slender stem that grows horizontally and puts down roots to form new plants. Strawberries spread by runners. Also called stolon Compare bulbcormrhizometuber.