horse-racing

listen to the pronunciation of horse-racing
English - Turkish
at yarışı
horseracing
{i} at yarışı
horse racing
at yarışı

Tom da at yarışını sever. - Tom also likes horse racing.

Bütün parasını at yarışına harcamayacak kadar akıllı. - He knows better than to spend all his money on horse racing.

horse race
at yarısı
horse racing
at yarısı
horse race
at yarışı
horse racing
ganyan
horseracing
at yarış
horseracing
(isim) at yarışı
thoroughbred horse racing
safkan at yarışı
English - English

Definition of horse-racing in English English dictionary

horse race
A competitive race for horses carrying jockeys; often the subject of betting
horse race
An exciting and arduous competition (as in a political campaign)
horse racing
a sport where horses and their jockeys compete to be fastest
horseracing
Alternative form of horse racing
Quarter-horse racing
Racing of Quarter Horses. It originated among British settlers in Virginia shortly after Jamestown was established in 1607. The course was traditionally a quarter-mile (400 m); today there are 11 officially sanctioned races, ranging from 220 to 870 yd (201 to 796 m). Timing is to the nearest .01 second
horse race
a contest of speed between horses; usually held for the purpose of betting
horse race
professional competition of speed of horses and their riders
horse racing
the sport of racing horses
horse racing
Horse racing is a sport in which horses ridden by people called jockeys run in races, sometimes jumping over fences. a sport in which horses with riders race against each other flat racing, steeplechase steeplechase, jockey jockey. Sport of running horses at speed. Typically, Thoroughbreds are raced with a rider astride and Standardbreds with the horse pulling a conveyance with a driver. Though racing has an ancient lineage, the first regularly organized national races were established in England under Charles II (r. 1660-85), and the first in North America were held on Long Island in 1665. These early races were match events between two or three horses and were run in heats; a horse had to complete at least two heats to be judged the winner. By the mid-18th century, larger fields of runners and single-race "dash" events were the norm. Handicap racing emerged in the mid-18th century as well, as gambling came to be a standard part of horse racing. Pari-mutuel betting was instituted in the 20th century. Thoroughbred racing, conducted on a flat, elliptical, mile-long track, attracts the largest purses, followed by harness racing and quarter-horse racing. The most important U.S. Thoroughbred races are the Kentucky Derby, Preakness Stakes, and Belmont Stakes. See also steeplechase
horseracing
{i} professional competition of speed of horses and their jockeys who race against each other