View Single Post
  #3 (permalink)  
Old 24-Dec-2007, 11:38
BobK's Avatar
BobK BobK is online now
Moderator
 
Join Date: Jul 2006
Country: England (South East)
Posts: 5,643
Current Location: England (South East)
First Language: English
Member Type: English Teacher
Thanks: 70
Thanked 793 Times in 698 Posts
BobK is a splendid one to beholdBobK is a splendid one to beholdBobK is a splendid one to beholdBobK is a splendid one to beholdBobK is a splendid one to beholdBobK is a splendid one to beholdBobK is a splendid one to behold
Default Re: including cricket words

Quote:
Originally Posted by lalda222 View Post
dear sir, please explain 1. Kumble earned 4 wickets for 56 runs but he alone could not paper over the cracks of another pitiful batting display. it was the scalp that the tourist[ s. africa] craved and effectively scuppered their hopes of a challenging total. He struck a clutch of lusty blows to frustrate south african' rampant attack and embellish the tourists' victory target with 20 potentially princeless runs. He clubbed 7 sixes in a blistering display of clean hitting. He spooned back a chance to bowler Haris. He slammed five sixes in his pugnacious knock of 56 runs.


lalda
I'll add a few explanations of tricky words.

the scalp that the tourist[ s. africa] craved: in some war-like cultures, fighting men 'scalp' their victims as a sort of trophy. In sports, people use the term 'scalp' to mean a person who is stronger than you on paper, and is well worth beating. 'Crave' is a strong way of saying 'want'.

scuppered their hopes: the scuppers are a sort of gutter that surrounds the deck of a ship. To 'scupper' a boat is to sink it. When one team scuppers another team's hopes, it makes their efforts hopeless.

A clutch of lusty blows: you'll find all these words in most dictionaries, but not one of them is the first you'll find:
a clutch = a small number (typically used of eggs in a nest)
lusty = vigorous
blows = hits (noun)

clubbed = hit crudely and powerfully, without any finesse or elegance

spooned back - the batsman hit the ball straight back to the bowler. It was not a hard/direct shot - he 'spooned' it (its trajectory was curved like a spoon - with the implication that he was doing a service, as one would feed a baby).

pugnacious knock - 'knock' here is a noun. In cricket, a batsman's knock is his innings [=his turn to bat]

Hope that helps.

b

Last edited by BobK; 24-Dec-2007 at 11:40. Reason: Fix typo
Reply With Quote