soccer
English
Etymology
Originally British English; Colloquial abbreviation for association football, via abbreviation assoc. + -er (slang suffix); earlier socker (1885), also socca (1889), with soccer attested 1888.
Compare contemporary rugger, from Rugby.[1] Similarly constructed coinages from the same period include: brekker (“breakfast”), fresher (“freshman”) and footer (“football”). See Oxford -er.
Pronunciation
Noun
soccer (uncountable)
- (historically slang, now standard) association football.
- Synonyms: (UK, formal, rarely used) association football, soccer football, (ambiguous) football; see also Thesaurus:football
- 1889 September 16, “Football Prospects in the West of England”, in The Western Daily Press, volume 63, number 9757, Bristol, page 7:
- Those who play under the "Socker" (Association) rules in the North of England, the Midlands, and Scotland take no heed of the warmness of the weather
- 1987, Charles Hughes, The Football Association Coaching Book of Soccer: Tactics and Skills, London: BBC, →ISBN:
Usage notes
Derived terms
Related terms
Descendants
Translations
game
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Verb
soccer (third-person singular simple present soccers, present participle soccering, simple past and past participle soccered)
- (Australian rules football) To kick the football directly off the ground, without using one's hands.
- 1990, Geoffrey Blainey, A Game of Our Own: The Origins of Australian Football, Black Inc. Publishing, published 2003, page 73:
- The rule seems to have encouraged players to soccer the ball along the ground.
- 2008, John Devaney, Full Points Footy′s WA Football Companion, page 334:
- […] West Perth seemed on the verge of victory, only to succumb by 4 points after a soccered goal from Old Easts with less than half a minute remaining.
- 2010 March 27, Michael Whiting, “Lions give Fev debut to remember”, in AFL - The official site of the Australian Football League:
- Fevola showed the best and worst of his play after dropping a simple chest mark, only to regather seconds later and soccer the ball through from the most acute of angles.
References
- Douglas Harper (2001–2024) “soccer”, in Online Etymology Dictionary.
Further reading
- soccer on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- Association football on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
French
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /sɔ.kœʁ/
- (Quebec) IPA(key): [sɔ.kɚ], [sɔ.kœ˞], [sɔ.kaœ̯ʁ]
Audio (CAN) (file)
See also
Anagrams
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