释义 |
▪ I. three-peat, n. Chiefly N. Amer. (orig. U.S. Sport). Brit. |ˈθrɪːpiːt|, U.S. |ˈθriˌpit| [‹ three adj. and n. + -peat (in repeat n.).] A third win or success, as of a contest or championship; esp. the third of three consecutive wins.
1988Newsday 30 June 156/4 He says the Lakers are matched only by the Celtics of the 1960s in terms of all-time basketball greatness, and already has added a new word, ‘threepeat’, to his vocabulary. 1994Toronto Star 10 July c5/3 After the back-to-back win of the World Series for the Jays, fans had automatically assumed a three-peat. 2001N.Y. Times Mag. 11 Feb. 64/1 As the mayor's second and final term draws to a close (term limits preclude a threepeat), the city is about to be inherited by someone of a very different temperament. ▪ II. three-peat, v. orig. U.S. Sport. Brit. |ˈθrɪːpiːt|, U.S. |ˈθriˌpit| [‹ three-peat n.] intr. To win a contest, championship, etc. for the third time, esp. consecutively. Also in extended use. Also trans., with the contest, etc., as object.
1989St. Louis (Missouri) Post-Dispatch (Nexis) 8 Mar. 2 d, The Lincoln High Tigers say they want to ‘three-peat’. ‘You know, kind of like repeat, except doing it for the third time,’ senior Sharif Ford said. 1991Sports Illustr. 8 Apr. 80/2 If he wins, he will be the first man to three-peat Augusta—and the first in 35 years to three-peat any major—and that means outclassing Nicklaus and Palmer and even Hogan himself. 1991San Francisco Chron. 15 Apr. c1/1 The Mountain View software firm ‘threepeats’ as best of companies with less than $200 million revenues. 1995N.Y. Times 24 Jan. b9/2 Linebacker Ken Norton took a calculated risk when he left Dallas, a two-time defending Super Bowl champion that looked primed to three-peat, for the promise of championship glory with San Francisco. 2000Ottawa Sun (Electronic ed.) 30 Oct. The Riders will be in tough to threepeat when they host the Broncos. |