surfing
pronunciation
How to pronounce surfing in British English: UK [ˈsɜːfɪŋ]
How to pronounce surfing in American English: US [ˈsɜːrfɪŋ]
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- Noun:
- the sport of riding a surfboard toward the shore on the crest of a wave
Word Origin
- surfing (n.)
- 1955, verbal noun from surf (v.). The surfing craze went nationwide in U.S. from California in 1963. Surf-board is from 1826, originally in a Hawaiian and Polynesian context. Surf music attested from 1963. It is highly amusing to a stranger to go out into the south part of this town, some day when the sea is rolling in heavily over the reef, and to observe there the evolutions and rapid career of a company of surf-players. The sport is so attractive and full of wild excitement to Hawaiians, and withal so healthful, that I cannot but hope it will be many years before civilization shall look it out of countenance, or make it disreputable to indulge in this manly, though it be dangerous, exercise. [the Rev. Henry T. Cheever, "Life in the Sandwich Islands," New York, 1851] "The basis of surfing music is a rock and roll bass beat figuration, coupled with a raunch-type weird-sounding lead guitar plus wailing saxes. Surfing music has to sound untrained with a certain rough flavor to appeal to the teenagers." [music publisher Murray Wilson, quoted in "Billboard," June 29, 1963]
Example
- 1. Best pals and brothers havelong succeeded together in surfing .
- 2. Here 's to web surfing like a pro .
- 3. They simply turned to watching reruns or surfing the web .
- 4. This is because web surfing uses up relatively small amounts of data .
- 5. Tracking your web surfing habits and showing you targeted advertising .