Hurdle
If you mean this word in the context of athletics, it is "hurdle".
Actually I think you are thinking of "Trample the weak, hurdle the dead", a song by the band Skinless. "Trample the weak" is straightforward enough. Hurdle here is alluding to the athletic event where runners leap over obstacles; "Hurdle the Dead" means jump over them. The idea may be that by the weak or wounded are still a potential threat to you so you step on them to keep them down; the dead can do you no harm, so you just leap over them.
1. hurdle: a problem or difficulty you must deal with before you can acheive something * Our first hurdle was finding enough money to fund the research. * Just to get this far, Selena has overcome several hurdles. 2. hurdle: something you jump over while running * Joanie hurtled the fence and ran down the street. 3. the hurdles: a race in which the runners must jump over hurdles * She won on gold medal in the woman's 100-meter hurdles.
what does the word exuberant mean
What does security word mean
If you mean this word in the context of athletics, it is "hurdle".
The word 'hurdle' functions as both a noun and a verb.EXAMPLESWhen a runner knocked the hurdle into the next lane, another runner went down. (noun)We were able to hurdle the issues that delayed the project. (verb)Her shyness was a hurdle she overcame to perform in the school play. (noun)
Obstruction
bound leap hurdle
Isn't it a hurdle? If that's what you mean. .
The likely word is hurdle (to jump, or an obstacle).
I jumped over the hurdle. The hurdle was to high for her to clear. Tony knocked over the hurdle because he didn't jump high enough. That enough? It's those things that people jump over during races for track & field.
Example sentence - He knew reading the book was the hardest hurdle to get past before he could write the book report.
hurdle tecnology is hurdle technology.
Turtle Hurdle :)
hurdle
EXAMPLE of hurdle: I hurdled down the street.