slåball
Norwegian Bokmål
Etymology
slå + ball, first part slå (“to hit, strike”), from Old Norse slá (“to hit, beat, strike”), from Proto-Germanic *slahaną (“to hit, strike, kill”), from Proto-Indo-European *slak- (“to hit, strike, throw”).
Second part ball (“a ball”), from Old Norse bǫllr (“a sphere, ball”), from Proto-Germanic *balluz (“a ball”), from Proto-Indo-European *bʰoln- (“round thing, bubble”), from *bʰel- (“to blow, inflate, swell”).
Noun
slåball m (definite singular slåballen) (uncountable)
- (sports) Danish longball (a game in which players have to hit a ball with a bat and run to the other side of a square)
- Synonyms: langball, stikkball
- 1992, Harald Skjønsberg, Veien mot virkeligheten:
- det var tiden for solskinn og utsprungne trær, for slåball i skolegården
- it was the time for sunshine and blossomed trees, for Danish longball in the school yard
Usage notes
A popular bat-and-ball game in Norwegian schools, often played by kids outside during gym class or recess.
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