croquet

croquet
/kroh kay"/; Brit. /kroh"kay, -kee/, n., v., croqueted /-kayd"/; Brit. /-kayd, -keed/, croqueting /-kay"ing/; Brit. /-kay ing, -kee ing/.
n.
1. a game played by knocking wooden balls through metal wickets with mallets.
2. (in croquet) the act of driving away an opponent's ball by striking one's own when the two are in contact.
v.t.
3. to drive away (a ball) by a croquet.
[1855-60; < F (dial.): hockey stick, lit., little hook; see CROCKET]

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(French dialect for "crook," "hockey stick") Game in which players using mallets drive wooden balls through a series of wickets, or hoops, set out on a lawn.

The object is to be the first to complete the course by passing through all the wickets and hitting a goal peg. Croquet evolved from the 13th-century French game pall-mall. Championship matches are organized by governing bodies in the U.S. and Britain.

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sport
also called  Lawn Croquet,  
 popular outdoor game, played on a lawn or court, with long-handled mallets with which the players hit balls through a series of wickets, or hoops.

      The game evolved from paille-maille (pall-mall) (French: “pall-mall”), which was played in France at least as early as the 13th century and introduced into England in the 16th century. The game that became known as croquet combined the basic elements of paille-maille—running a mallet-driven ball through a hoop or hoops to touch a peg as a goal—into a somewhat more complicated sport involving a series of six or more hoops laid out in a pattern, which had to be run in a specified order.

      In lawn croquet, the informal version of croquet that is played in the United States, nine wire hoops and two wooden stakes are placed on an area no more than 40 feet (12 m) wide and 75 feet (23 m) long. Each side has 32 points to make, 16 with each ball. The hardwood balls are solid or striped with colour; the mallets, also of hardwood, have handles approximately 30 inches (76 cm) long. As in other versions of croquet, the object is for a player to put the ball through all wickets, or as many as possible, before turning play over to his opponent.

      In the United States, organized croquet was first sponsored by the National Croquet Association, established in 1882. At a tournament meeting in New York City in 1889, the letters c and t were dropped from the term croquet by some players, making the name roque. Roque courts and play differed markedly from Great Britain's association croquet (q.v.) in having a clay surface and solid boundary walls.

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Universalium. 2010.

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