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grounders

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

English

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Pronunciation

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Noun

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grounders (uncountable)

  1. (Canada, playground games) A playground game in which one person is chosen to be "it" (and must keep their eyes shut) and tries to tag others, who become "it" instead, either by touching them or by calling out "grounders" while they are on the ground (rather than on a climber).
    • 2016 May 16, “Dalhousie ready to play”, in Winnipeg Free Press[1], archived from the original on 2023-03-04:
      "It's so cool," Nolan, a Grade 5 student at Dalhousie said, adding that he was looking forward to the first game of grounders. "It has three slides and I like the colours. They're really nice."
    • 2017 April 5, Jeff Outhit, “UW students building the perfect playground”, in Waterloo Region Record[2], archived from the original on 2023-03-04:
      Apparently, kids like to climb, swing and slide. Who knew? And they like playground games. Two favourites (ask a kid if you don't know) are grounders (it combines tag and hide-and-seek) and gaga ball (a kinder, gentler version of dodge ball).
    • 2019 July 16, Clare Hennig, “Future of summer camp for refugee children uncertain as student founders graduate”, in CBC News[3], archived from the original on 2021-10-26:
      The games they learn to play — like the tag game "grounders" or "cops-and-robbers" — are things that show up on many school playgrounds.

Noun

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grounders

  1. plural of grounder

Anagrams

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