track
noun
- a course laid out for running or racing.
- the group of sports performed on such a course, as running or hurdling, as distinguished from field events.
- both track and field events as a whole.
- a band of recorded sound laid along the length of a magnetic tape.
- band2(def 6).
- an individual song or segment of a recording: a title track.
- a discrete, separate recording that is combined with other parts of a musical recording to produce the final aural version: a special rhythm track added to the basic track.
verb (used with object)
verb (used without object)
Verb Phrases
Idioms for track
Origin of track
OTHER WORDS FROM track
Words nearby track
Words related to tracker
Example sentences from the Web for tracker
The tracker focuses on three specific forms of support: financing, health-care personnel, and in-kind contributions.
One of her deputy chiefs of staff keeps track of the tracker, an Excel spreadsheet, she says.
It looks more like a watch than anything else, and indeed it is, but it also has more sensors than any other tracker out there.
A tracker with an altimeter will give you a far more accurate picture of calories-burned.
That means it almost certainly gives you the best information about calorie burn of any tracker.
And in the night, early before the moon rose, the lion came and took the girl of Siss the Tracker.
Tales of Space and Time |Herbert George WellsWhen the tracker stopped, it threw the bobcat's whole plan out of gear.
The Duck-footed Hound |James Arthur KjelgaardAnd as the tracker had said, it came to a stop here and there, while a small patch was more trodden than the other.
With the Dyaks of Borneo |F. S. BreretonBy nature and equipment every really expert hunter and tracker is a detective.
Average Jones |Samuel Hopkins AdamsDalgard who had been a hunter and a tracker before he was an explorer crouched for a clearer view.
Star Born |Andre Norton
British Dictionary definitions for tracker
noun
- a course for running or racing
- (as modifier)track events
- sports performed on a track
- track and field events as a whole
verb
- to provide with a track
- to run on a track of (a certain width)
Derived forms of track
trackable, adjective tracker, nounWord Origin for track
Idioms and Phrases with tracker
In addition to the idioms beginning with track
- track down
- track record
also see:
- cover one's tracks
- drop in one's tracks
- fast track
- follow in someone's footsteps (tracks)
- inside track
- jump the track
- keep (lose) track
- make tracks
- off the beaten track
- off the track
- one-track mind
- on the right tack (track)
- right side of the tracks
- stop cold (in one's tracks)