Today Word of the Day Sclaff • \SKLAF\ • verb : to - TopicsExpress



          

Today Word of the Day Sclaff • \SKLAF\ • verb : to scrape the ground instead of hitting the ball cleanly on a golf stroke Examples: Despite a bogey on his penultimate hole of the morning, where he sclaffed about in the sand and made things worse with three putts, it was a second consecutive 72 for the former Open champion. — Paul Forsyth, Scotland on Sunday, April 13, 2003 Good luck to him while hes chasing his wee white ball on the golf course from one clump of bushes to another, sclaffing out of miniature beaches in pursuit of his unseen target hole several hundred yards away. — Daily Record, July 7, 2012 Did you know? Theres no dearth of names for bad shots on the golf course. The duffer can dub, slice, hook, top, pull, push, sky, shank, or sclaff a shot. Sclaff is a word at home—albeit not warmly welcomed—on the Scottish links. In Scots, sclaff originally referred to a slap with the palm of the hand and was likely of onomatopoeic origin. The similarity of the painful resonance of a sclaff to the disheartening thud of a golf club striking the ground behind a ball did not go unnoticed by grimacing golfers on the fairway. By the 19th centurys end, sclaff was being used as both a noun and verb for such a stroke.,
Posted on: Mon, 07 Jul 2014 13:23:33 +0000

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