Nervy vs Racing - What's the difference?
nervy | racing |
(US) Having nerve; bold; brazen.
(British) Feeling nervous, anxious or agitated.
* {{quote-news
, year=2012
, date=May 9
, author=John Percy
, title=Birmingham City 2 Blackpool 2 (2-3 on agg): match report
, work=the Telegraph
(archaic) Strong; sinewy.
The sport of competing in races.
* 1870 , Delabere Pritchett Blaine, An encyclopaedia of rural sports (page 231)
As an adjective nervy
is having nerve; bold; brazen.As a noun racing is
the sport of competing in races.As a verb racing is
present participle of lang=en.nervy
English
Adjective
(er)citation, page= , passage= Blackpool continue to thrive on the adrenalin rush of the end-of-season shoot-out and are heading for a second Wembley date in two years after negotiating a nervy path past Birmingham.}}
- his nervy knees — Keats.
Derived terms
* nervily * nervinessracing
English
(wikipedia racing)Noun
- Chariot racings are probably, however, those in which the horse first distinguished himself as a courser, and we believe our earliest notices on the subject point to those of Persia, which were practised at the sacrifices made to the sun