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See also: Athletic

English

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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    From French athlétique and Latin āthlēticus, from Ancient Greek ἀθλητικός (athlētikós, relating to an athlete), from ἀθλητής (athlētḗs, athlete): equivalent to athlete +‎ -ic. For more, see athlete.

    Pronunciation

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    Adjective

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    athletic (comparative more athletic, superlative most athletic)

    1. (not comparable) Having to do with athletes.
      Are you a member of the American Athletic Association?
    2. Physically active.
      Since you're such an athletic person, you may wish to consider joining.
    3. Having a muscular, well developed body, being in shape.
      You have such an athletic build—you must work out regularly.
    4. An attribute of a motion or play which requires fine physical ability.
      The center fielder made an athletic play to snatch the ball from over the fence.
    5. (video games) Of a level in a Super Mario game: with an emphasis on platforming challenge, often involving precise jumps between floating platforms above a bottomless pit, and having upbeat background music.
      • 2018, Super Mario Bros. Encyclopedia, Milwaukie: Dark Horse, →OCLC, page 65:
        An athletic course in which Mario must traverse rotating lifts and stretch blocks.
      • 2019, S. M. Lucas, V. Volz, “Tile pattern KL-divergence for analysing and evolving game levels”, in Proceedings of the Genetic and Evolutionary Computation Conference, page 171:
        Mario levels are usually indicated to belong to one of five types (overworld, underground, athletic, castle, underwater)2. The type determines the aesthetic style of the level, but also affects the challenges that are posed. For example, athletic levels usually contain platforms that are spaced far apart, as well as moving platforms. They thus require precise and timed jumps to traverse.

    Derived terms

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    Translations

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    Noun

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    athletic (plural athletics)

    1. A muscular, large–boned person, in the typology of Ernst Kretschmer.

    Anagrams

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