释义 |
Word forms: plural own goals1. countable noun [usually singular]In sport, if someone scores an own goal, they accidentally score a goal for the team they are playing against. [British] Southampton took the lead through an own goal after only 30 seconds. 2. countable noun [usually singular]If a course of action that someone takes harms their own interests, you can refer to it as an own goal. [British] The debacle over its deputy president was another own goal. own goal in British Englishnoun1. soccer a goal scored by a player accidentally playing the ball into his or her own team's net Abbreviation: o.g. 2. informal any action that results in disadvantage to the person who took it or to a party, group, etc with which that person is associated Examples of 'own goal' in a sentenceown goal Pupils are doing all sorts of really impressive things and we encourage the students to set their own goals.He scored three own goals in successive Championship matches.His critique of the mental frailty may be widely shared but letting the players know you think it is a monumental own goal.He struck with two second-half headers - and in between conceded an own goal.When you are on a booking, you don't go lunging in nowhere near your own goal.But he netted an embarrassing own goal to settle a dull affair yesterday.Set your own goals in life.Some people shout at me, telling me not to score another own goal.His team scored an own goal when they played Argentina.It's a spectacular own goal.The big centreback had played with solid defiance but in the space of four minutes, he missed a fine chance and scored an own goal.ONLY three players have netted two own goals in a game in Premier League history. In other languagesown goal British English: own goal NOUN In sport, if someone scores an own goal, they accidentally score a goal for the team they are playing against. They took the lead through an own goal after only 30 seconds. - American English: own goal
- Brazilian Portuguese: gol contra
- Chinese: 乌龙球
- European Spanish: autogol
- French: but contre son camp
- German: Eigentor
- Italian: autogol
- Japanese: オウンゴール
- Korean: 자책골
- European Portuguese: autogolo
- Latin American Spanish: gol en contra
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