Crossword clues for regatta
regatta
- Race on the water
- Race on the Thames
- Yachting race
- Yacht meeting
- Yacht contest
- Word that originally meant "gondola race"
- Thames contest
- Tennessee's annual Head of the Hooch is a major one
- Shell game of a sort
- Sailing contest
- Sailing competition
- Rowing or sailing event
- Rowing event
- Rowing competition
- River Thames race
- Race series
- Race on waves
- Race meeting for boats
- Meeting for boat races
- Meet on the river
- Meet at the shore?
- Meet at the river, perhaps
- Meet at sea
- Henley-on-Thames race
- Crew event
- Crew competition
- Cowes Week event
- Competition with sailing or rowing races
- Competition for yachtsmen
- Boat race festival
- Boat meeting (at Henley, say)
- Boat carnival
- Astor Cup, e.g
- Aegean Rally, for one
- Queen's Cup, e.g.
- Astor Cup, e.g.
- What might follow off-shore drilling?
- Annual Henley-on-Thames event
- Yachting event
- Breezy competition
- Occasion for flags
- Event for scullers
- Offshore race
- Yachting competition
- Newport event
- A meeting for boat races
- Henley event
- Astor Cup competition, e.g.
- Race for the Queen's Cup
- Ted Turner event
- Boat race-meeting
- Sailing race
- Henley, for one
- Meet with sailors, for example, at rear of port, welcomed by Rear Admiral
- A target set out for meeting at sea
- Ciabatta German packs up for sports meet
- Event for craft
- Sailboat race
- Farm labourer, lacking company, upset over a sports event
- Yacht race carnival
- Races for boats
- Boating event
- Boat racing event
- Boat race meeting
- Sailing event
- Henley's claim to fame
- Annual Charles River event
- Rowing race
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Regatta \Re*gat"ta\ (r?*g?t"t?), n.; pl. Regattas (-t?z). [It. regatta, regata.] Originally, a gondola race in Venice; now, a rowing or sailing race, or a series of such races.
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
1650s, name of a boat race among gondoliers held on the Grand Canal in Venice, from Italian (Venetian dialect) regatta, literally "contention for mastery," from rigattare "to compete, haggle, sell at retail." [Klein's sources, however, suggest a source in Italian riga "row, rank," from a Germanic source and related to English row (v.).] The general meaning of "boat race, yacht race" is usually considered to have begun with a race on the Thames by that name June 23, 1775 (see OED), but there is evidence that it was used as early as 1768.
Wiktionary
n. 1 A series of boat races, although sometimes used for a single race. 2 A striped cotton fabric.
WordNet
n. a meeting for boat races
Wikipedia
A regatta is a series of boat races. The term typically describes racing events of rowed or sailed water craft, although some powerboat race series are also called regattas. A regatta often includes social and promotional activities which surround the racing event, and except in the case of boat type (or "class") championships, is usually named for the town or venue where the event takes place.
Although regattas are typically amateur competitions, they are usually formally structured events, with comprehensive rules describing the schedule and procedures of the event. Regattas may be organized as championships for a particular area or type of boat, but are often held just for the joy of competition, camaraderie, and general promotion of the sport.
Sailing race events are typically held for a single class (a single model of boat, such as the Islander 36) and usually last more than one day. Regattas may be hosted by a yacht club, sailing association, town or school as in the case of the UK's National School Sailing Association and Interscholastic Sailing Association (high school) regattas or Intercollegiate Sailing Association (college) regattas. Currently, The Three Bridge Fiasco, conducted by the Singlehanded Sailing Society of San Francisco Bay with more than 350 competitors is the largest sailboat race in the United States.
One of the largest and most popular rowing regattas is the Henley Royal Regatta held on the River Thames, England. One of the largest and oldest yachting regattas in the world is Cowes Week, which is held annually by the Royal Yacht Squadron in Cowes, England, and usually attracts over 900 sailboats. Cowes Week is predated by the Cumberland Cup (1775), Port of Dartmouth Royal Regatta (1822) and Port of Plymouth Regatta (1823). North America's oldest regatta is the Royal St. John's Regatta held on Quidi Vidi Lake in St. John's, Newfoundland every year since 1818.
Etymology: From Venetian regata ("contention for mastery"), from regatare ("compete, haggle, sell at retail"), possibly from recatare.
Regatta is a family-owned outdoor and leisure clothing company which has been established in the United Kingdom since 1981. It competes with Karrimor, Peter Storm.
Usage examples of "regatta".
Let thy errand in port be what it may, thou art in good season to witness the regatta which will be given by the state itself to-morrow.
Officers had been busy, throughout the morning, in causing all the shipping and heavy boats, of which hundreds lay in that principal artery of the city, to remove from the centre of the passage, and heralds now summoned the citizens to witness the regatta, with which the public ceremonies of the day were to terminate.
The regatta was to be held on this canal, which offered the requisites of length and space, and which, as it was lined with most of the palaces of the principal senators, afforded all the facilities necessary for viewing the struggle.
A thousand bowed in approbation of the sentiment, and a rumor passed from mouth to mouth that a young noble was about to try his strength in the regatta, in compliment to some wayward beauty.
Mark holds the balance with an even hand, and that this obscure fisherman, having deserved the honors of this regatta, will receive them with the same readiness on the part of him who bestows, as if he were the most favored follower of our own house.
There as another regatta, in which men of inferior powers contended, but we deem it unworthy to detain the narrative by a description.
Highness, thy strife in the regatta, and thy search for the ring, had the same object?
He related his hopes for the boy, the manner in which they had been blasted by the unjust and selfish policy of the state, his different efforts to procure the release of his grandson, and his bold expedients at the regatta, and the fancied nuptials with the Adriatic.
Main sought his little farm, satisfied with the pageants and regatta of the previous day.
Thou hast a good reason for thy regrets, since a gayer marriage of the sea, or a braver regatta, has not been witnessed in Venice since thou wast born.
On his return, the menial reported that the mob had quitted the court of the palace, and was gone to the cathedral, with the body of the fisherman who had so unexpectedly gained the prize in the regatta of the preceding day.
They say Jacopo is revengeful, and that shame and anger at his defeat in the late regatta, by one old as this, was the reason.
The agents of the police took the precaution to circulate in the city, that the Senate permitted this honor to the memory of the old fisherman, on account of his success in the regatta, and as some atonement for his unmerited and mysterious death.
Cup regatta because TV coverage would draw away attention from the defender and challenger finals that were set to begin on April 10 and 11, televised live on ESPN.
San Diego Yacht Club as Kansas millionaire Bill Koch had done successfully in the Cup regatta of 1992.