Associations to the word «Replay»
Noun
- Kilkenny
- Trafford
- Munster
- Meath
- Waterford
- Fa
- Umpire
- Referee
- Fixture
- Wembley
- Cork
- Entirety
- Draw
- Foul
- Galway
- Armagh
- Tape
- Match
- Penalty
- Final
- Albion
- Tie
- Summers
- Cup
- Leeds
- Chelsea
- Semi
- Score
- Wednesday
- Replay
- Footage
- Recorder
- Sheffield
- Goalkeeper
- Saturday
- Highlight
- Winner
- Venue
- Rover
- Weekend
- Ball
- Goal
- Game
- Newcastle
- Ranger
- Dublin
- Victory
- Reviewer
- Kick
- Hotspur
- Tottenham
- Warrington
- Won
- Viewer
- Minute
- Middlesbrough
- Barnsley
- Limerick
- Wexford
- Camera
- Kerry
- Tipperary
- Shootout
- Luton
- Arsenal
- Oldham
- Huddersfield
- Stoppage
- Collingwood
- Leinster
- Burnley
- Wanderer
Adjective
Wiktionary
REPLAY, verb. (transitive) to play again
REPLAY, verb. To display a recording of a previous event, especially multiple times
REPLAY, noun. The replaying of (something), for example of televised footage.
REPLAY, noun. (gaming) saved video footage of the gameplay of a computer game
REPLAY, noun. (sport) a replayed match, often after the first game or match ended in a draw.
REPLAY ATTACK, noun. (computer science) (security) An attempt to subvert security by recording legitimate communications and repeating them to try to impersonate a valid user.
REPLAY ATTACKS, noun. Plural of replay attack
REPLAY VALUE, noun. (video games) The entertainment value obtained by playing a computer game more than once; replayability.
Dictionary definition
REPLAY, noun. Something (especially a game) that is played again.
REPLAY, noun. The immediate rebroadcast of some action (especially sports action) that has been recorded on videotape.
REPLAY, verb. Reproduce (a recording) on a recorder; "The lawyers played back the conversation to show that their client was innocent".
REPLAY, verb. Play (a melody) again.
REPLAY, verb. Repeat a game against the same opponent; "Princeton replayed Harvard".
REPLAY, verb. Play again; "We replayed the game"; "replay a point".
Wise words
One merit of poetry few persons will deny: it says more and
in fewer words than prose.