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| an extraordinary or unusual thing, person, or event; an exceptional example or instance. |
| an arrangement of five objects, as trees, in a square or rectangle, one at each corner and one in the middle. |
| run down | |
| —vb | |
| 1. | to cause or allow (an engine, battery, etc) to lose power gradually and cease to function or (of an engine, battery, etc) to do this |
| 2. | to decline or reduce in number or size: the firm ran down its sales force |
| 3. | (tr, usually passive) to tire, sap the strength of, or exhaust: he was thoroughly run down and needed a holiday |
| 4. | (tr) to criticize adversely; denigrate; decry |
| 5. | (tr) to hit and knock to the ground with a moving vehicle |
| 6. | nautical |
| a. (tr) to collide with and cause to sink | |
| b. (intr, preposition) to navigate so as to move parallel to (a coast) | |
| 7. | (tr) to pursue and find or capture: to run down a fugitive |
| 8. | (tr) to read swiftly or perfunctorily: he ran down their list of complaints |
| —adj | |
| 9. | tired; exhausted |
| 10. | worn-out, shabby, or dilapidated |
| —n | |
| 11. | a brief review, résumé, or summary |
| 12. | the process of a motor or mechanism coming gradually to a standstill after the source of power is removed |
| 13. | a reduction in number or size |
run definition
|
run down
Stop because of lack of power or force, as in The alarm clock finally ran down. [Mid-1700s]
Make or be tired, cause to decline or be declined in health or vigor, as in His long illness ran him down, leaving him with no energy, or After that huge assignment his strength ran down. [First half of 1800s]
Collide with and knock over, as in The speeding motorist ran down a pedestrian. [Second half of 1500s]
Chase and capture, as in Police detectives ran down the suspects. [Second half of 1600s]
Trace the source of, as in She ran down all the references at the library.
Disparage, as in Don't run him down, he's a talented actor. [Second half of 1600s] Also see put down, def. 4.
Also, . Look over, review, as in Let's run down the membership list again and see if we can pick a delegate, or She ran her eyes over the crowd, looking for her husband.
In baseball, tag out a runner between bases, as in We might have won but in the last inning they ran down two of our runners.