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Answer for the clue "Target of pre-race stretching ", 9 letters:
hamstring

Alternative clues for the word hamstring

Word definitions for hamstring in dictionaries

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
1640s, "to disable, render useless," a figurative verbal extension from the noun hamstring "tendon at the back of the knee" (1560s), from ham "bend of the knee" (see ham (n.1)) + string (n.). Cutting this would render a person or animal lame. Related: Hamstrung ...

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 (context anatomy English) One of the great tendons situated in each side of the ham, or space back of the knee, and connected with the muscles of the back of the thigh. 2 (context informal English) The biceps femoris muscle. vb. (context transitive ...

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Hamstring \Ham"string`\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Hamstrung ; p. pr. & vb. n. Hamstringing . See String .] To lame or disable by cutting the tendons of the ham or knee; to hough; hence, to cripple; to incapacitate; to disable. So have they hamstrung the valor ...

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. one of the tendons at the back of the knee [syn: hamstring tendon ] [also: hamstrung ]

Usage examples of hamstring.

A French knight broke through the English ranks, but a dozen archers swarmed over the horse, hamstrung it and hauled its rider down to the mud where they hacked at him with axe, billhook and sword.

Sweating lightly in the overheated room, she lay on her stomach on the Keiser hamstring machine and jerked her heels toward her butt, feet hooked beneath padded bars.

An exploded shell passed through the hamstring muscles of the right thigh and embedded itself in the ligamentous tissues of the internal condyle of the femur.

The Navy brass are hamstrung by their own fear and preconceptions about psychology, which Obe and Ramsey find easy enough to play on.

It was the back of the leg with its hamstring attachments and the veins and, most important, the big popliteal artery, that would require all the unriddling.

His and hers, for Vanni, if she remembered him at all, was probably living under the protection of a wealthy balletomane or even married to a dancer with hamstrings like hawsers and long hair.

Trish was hamstrung by the fact that Alien did not wish her to tell anyone of his life with Mr Nance, or of his heroism in the railway accident, nor of his high standing in the British Horological Institute.

The Iraqis continued to look for ways to hamstring the inspectors, but their obstructionism and harassment were more an annoyance than an impediment.

The other warrior kept running headlong, fleeing without a backward glance, and Nom Anor soon discovered what the warrior fled from: a limping, snarling, shouting mob, bearing a variety of improvised weapons, from spade rays to malledillos to writhing wild amphistaffs as much a danger to their wielder as to an enemy, which descended upon the hamstrung warrior to beat and chop him to death with savage triumph.

The huge hike of the day before had left every joint in my body aching, my muscles, especially in my calves and hamstrings stiff as well as painful, and a huge heavy weight of tiredness on my shoulders.

Leo dropped to his knees and slashed at the calf of another: hamstringing was highly effective, if not at all the type of blow Asherah expected an aristocrat of Byzantium to resort to.

Not, at least, without security arrangements which would effectively hamstring their own operations.

Hamstrings and glutes, latissimus dorsi and abdominals-all the names his trainer had mentioned came back in vivid and excruciating detail.

Shemsi weighed Leo, then measured his height, length of arm and leg, and the size of biceps, triceps, femoris, and hamstring muscles.

The dwarves, blood enemies of the Firbolgs, attacked with cruel efficiency, hamstringing many of their giant opponents with the first attack.