intramural
IPA: ɪntrʌmjˈʊrʌɫ
noun
- A (usually sports) competition between teams belonging to the same school.
adjective
- Within the walls; within one institution, particularly a school.
- Within the substance of the walls of an organ.
Advertisement
Examples of "intramural" in Sentences
- Football is played on the intramural level.
- Most of the club and intramural sports are coed.
- The ground is also used for the intramural teams.
- And they definitely participate in intramural sports.
- The college also has intramural and recreational athletics.
- The student body actively participates in Intramural sports.
- The University also offers several club and intramural sports.
- The fieldhouse is also used for recreation and Intramural sports.
- The operates competitive and intramural sports at the high school.
- Intramural sports activities are also available in the winter and spring.
- The athletic program includes both interscholastic sports and intramurals.
- Annoyed by Edward’s performance in intramural sports, Roy has made a new sport out of picking on the poor kid.
- He enthusiastically participated in intramural sports and was an active member of the Air Force Reserve Officers
- So some scientists from California who worked with the stuff on the Manhattan Project decided to call their intramural baseball team the 49ers.
- Administration at the University of California at Berkeley, he participated in intramural sports and held offices in his fraternity, Sigma Alpha
- He began calling intramural games in college, which led to officiating elementary and middle school games, which led to high school games and a full high school schedule.
- A diamond to the clever math nerds who, The Herald reported this week, call their intramural hockey team "the Eulers," after the famous mathematical thinker and the NHLers from Edmonton.
- In my experience, most leakers, even of highly classified material, are motivated by surprisingly petty interests – things like spite, flattery, and a desire to win intramural debates by other means.
- This is where Disch's sledgehammer approach seems particularly questionable to me, because I agree with many of his conclusions, but would want to add footnotes and amendments before signing on -- for instance, I admire Merril's Best SF anthologies more than any other such series, but I don't see anything particularly wrong with "intramural" anthologies, either, because done well they can be quite satisfying books.
Advertisement
Advertisement