Associations to the word «Umpire»
Noun
- Dissent
- Penn
- Rana
- Call
- Player
- Barrett
- Appeal
- Hammersmith
- Judgement
- Evans
- Brave
- Calling
- Veteran
- Bangladeshi
- Reilly
- Association
- Rule
- Field
- Minor
- Babe
- Owens
- Gibbons
- Championship
- Palermo
- Carlson
- Doug
- Nottinghamshire
- Ballot
- Dispute
- Brisbane
- Bargaining
- Twins
- Runner
- Dusty
- Zealand
- Blazer
- Robb
- Whistle
- Aaa
- Rowing
- Teammate
- Total
- List
- Safe
- Vic
- Glove
- Ron
- Pennant
- Barrie
- Minute
- Barnett
- Billy
- Spat
- Obstruction
- Pinch
- Molina
- Dunne
- Tribunal
- Hubbard
- Gerry
- Season
- Bump
- Joseph
- Mckinley
- Warning
- Tasmanian
- Prompting
- Delivery
- Judgment
- Richie
- Sideline
- England
- Nolan
- Ivor
Adjective
Wiktionary
UMPIRE, noun. (tennis) The official who presides over a tennis game sat on a high chair.
UMPIRE, noun. (cricket) One of the two white-coated officials who preside over a cricket match.
UMPIRE, noun. (baseball) One of usually 4 officials who preside over a baseball game.
UMPIRE, noun. (American football) The official who stands behind the line on the defensive side.
UMPIRE, noun. (Australian rules football) A match official on the ground deciding and enforcing the rules during play. As of 2007 the Australian Football League uses 3, or in the past 2 or just 1. The other officials, the goal umpires and boundary umpires, are normally not called just umpires alone.
UMPIRE, noun. (legal) A person who arbitrates between contending parties
UMPIRE, verb. (sports) (intransitive) To act as an umpire in a game.
UMPIRE, verb. (transitive) To decide as an umpire; to arbitrate; to settle (a dispute, etc.).
Dictionary definition
UMPIRE, noun. An official at a baseball game.
UMPIRE, noun. Someone chosen to judge and decide a disputed issue; "the critic was considered to be an arbiter of modern literature"; "the arbitrator's authority derived from the consent of the disputants"; "an umpire was appointed to settle the tax case".
UMPIRE, verb. Be a referee or umpire in a sports competition.
Wise words
Words derive their power from the original word.