track
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track (trak)
noun
- a mark or series of marks or other discoverable evidence left by a person, animal, or thing that has passed, as a footprint, wheel rut, wake of a boat, etc.
- a trace or vestige
- a beaten path or trail left by the repeated passage of persons, animals, or vehicles
- a course or line of motion or action; route; way
- the projection of the flight path of an airplane, rocket, etc. on the surface of the earth
- a sequence of ideas, events, etc.; succession
- a path or circuit laid out for running, horse racing, etc.
- ☆ any of the courses of study continuing through succeeding grades in an educational structure (tracking), arranged according to various levels of mastery, to which students are assigned on the basis of test performance, abilities, needs, etc.
- a pair of parallel metal rails, with their crossties, etc., on which trains, streetcars, etc. run
- ☆ the distance between the centers of the tread of parallel wheels, as of an automobile
- either of the two endless belts with which tanks, some tractors, etc. are equipped for moving over rough ground
- the narrow channel, containing lengthwise copper wires or strips carrying electric current, into which track lights are inserted
- any of various structural channels or grooves, as one that holds a sliding door or window
- the tread of an automobile tire
- ☆
- athletic sports performed on a track, as running, hurdling, etc.
- track and field sports together
- soundtrack
- any of the separate divisions on a phonograph record, compact disc, etc. containing individual selections
- any of the separate, parallel recording surfaces extending along the length of a magnetic tape
- the long continuous spiral groove on a phonograph record in which a stylus moves
- in a computer, that part of a magnetic drum, tape, or disk that passes under a given reading head position
- Film tracking shot
Etymology: LME trak < MFr trac, a track, tract, trace < ?
transitive verb
- to follow the track or footprints of to track game
- to follow (a path, etc.)
- to trace by means of vestiges, evidence, etc.
- to plot the path of and record data from (an aircraft, spacecraft, missile, etc.) using radar, a telescope, etc.
- to tread or travel
- to leave tracks or footprints on (often with up)
- ☆ to leave in the form of tracks to track dirt over a floor
- ☆ to provide with tracks or rails
- Film to follow (a moving object or person) with a moving camera
intransitive verb
- to run in the same (width) track
- to be in alignment, as gears, wheels, or the stylus of a phonograph cartridge with a groove on a record
- to have a (specified) width between the wheels a narrow-gauge car tracks less than 56 inches
- Film to track a moving object: said of a camera or its operator
Related Forms:
- tracker track′er noun
(dead) in one's tracks
☆keep track of
lose track of
make tracks
☆on (or off) the track
the wrong side of the tracks
☆track down
- to pursue until caught, as by following tracks
- to investigate fully or search for until found
Webster's New World College Dictionary Copyright © 2005 by Wiley Publishing, Inc., Cleveland, Ohio.
Used by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Alternate definitions:
track
n.
A prepared way
path, course, road, route, trail, lane, roadway, passage, towpath, pathway, clearing, cut, alley, avenue, walk; see also railroad.Types of tracks include: railroad, cinder, race, turf, rail, field, cablecar, train, el, elevated train, running, bicycle, subway, trolley; monorail, third rail.
Evidence left in passage
footprint, trace, vestige, impression, tire track, mark, footmark, spoor, trail, imprint, remnant, record, indication, print, fingerprint, sign, remains, memorial, token, symbol, clue, scent, wake, monument; see also step 3.
keep track of
lose track of
make tracks*
off the track
the wrong side of the tracks*
track
v.
To follow by evidence
hunt, pursue, smell out, add up, put together, trail, follow, trace, follow the scent, follow a clue, follow footprints, draw an inference, piece together, dog, be hot on the trail of*, tail*, shadow*. * To dirty with tracks
leave footprints, leave mud, muddy, stain, filth, soil, besmear, spatter, leave a trail of dirt, draggle; see also dirty.To follow in alignment
move in a straight line, keep in a groove, keep in line, move in the same line, follow the track, run straight.
Webster's New World Roget's A-Z Thesaurus Copyright © 1999 by Wiley Publishing, Inc., Cleveland, Ohio.
Used by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Converse of object
- keep: Cookies The use of cookies enable us to keep track of your shopping patterns thus enabling us to identify you.
Preposition: on
- album: Martin tell us that the next track will be " the first track on the album.
Converse of subject
- criss-cross: Tantalizingly, the Kogi lands are criss-crossed by man-made tracks and staircases up and down the mountain ridges.
Adjective modifier
- beaten: More realistic for most travelers might be a visit to an island that is really off the beaten track.
Modifies a noun
- record: My track record auto insurer in cover you for.
Noun used with modifier
- dirt: Don't take the narrow dirt track which is first on the left.
Followed by a transitive particle
- down: Also Philip Cummins has been very helpful in helping me track down the problems I am having with vMac.
The word usage examples above have been gathered from various sources to reflect current and historical usage. They do not represent the opinions of YourDictionary.com.
What is Africa to me: Copper sun or scarlet sea, Jungle star or jungle track, Strong bronzed men, or regal black Women from whose loins I sprang When the birds of Eden sang?
Pardon me boy is that the Chattanooga Choo-choo, Track twenty nine, Boy you can give me a shine.
Then I saw the Congo, creeping through the black, Cutting through the forest with a golden track.
Webster's New World Dictionary of Quotations Copyright © 2005 by Chambers Harrap Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved. Published by Wiley, Hoboken, NJ. Used by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
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Cite this page:
MLA Style
"track." Webster's New World College Dictionary. 2009
- Your Dictionary. 5 July 2009
- <www.yourdictionary.com/track>
APA Style
track. (2009). In Webster's New World College Dictionary
- Retrieved July 5th, 2009, from www.yourdictionary.com/track
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