Leisure & Nightlife, MAC-POK
When it comes to free time, everyone has his or her own activity of choice. While some may like to repose with a nice game of bridge, poker, or chess, others may find bungee jumping or bullfighting to be more engaging, and still others would rather opt for hiking or archery. Luckily, there's no shortage of leisure activities available for those who have the time, resources, and inclination to pursue them.
Leisure & Nightlife Encyclopedia Articles By Title
Maccabiah Games, international games held in Palestine (later Israel) from 1932, sponsored by the World Maccabi......
magic square, square matrix often divided into cells, filled with numbers or letters in particular arrangements......
mah-jongg, game of Chinese origin, played with tiles, or pais, that are similar in physical description to those......
marathon, long-distance footrace first held at the revival of the Olympic Games in Athens in 1896. It commemorates......
marble, small, hard ball that is used in a variety of children’s games and is named after the 18th-century practice......
March Madness, informal term that refers to the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I men’s......
Marquess of Queensberry rules, code of rules that most directly influenced modern boxing. Written by John Graham......
J. Willard Marriott was an American businessman who founded one of the largest hotel and restaurant organizations......
martial art, any of various fighting sports or skills, mainly of East Asian origin, such as kung fu (Pinyin gongfu),......
Masters Tournament, invitational golf tournament held annually since 1934 from Thursday through Sunday during the......
Bat Masterson was a gambler, saloonkeeper, lawman, and newspaperman who made a reputation in the old American West.......
matador, in bullfighting, the principal performer who works the capes and usually dispatches the bull with a sword......
Elsa Maxwell was an American columnist, songwriter, and professional hostess, famous for her lavish and animated......
McDonald’s Corporation (McDonald’s) is one of the world’s largest and most recognized fast-food chains, known for......
Melbourne Cup, annual horse race, first held in 1861, that is the most important Australian Thoroughbred race of......
middle-distance running, in athletics (track and field), races that range in distance from 800 metres (roughly......
midget-car racing, form of automobile racing, popular in the United States, in which miniature front-engine racing......
The Mille Miglia remains the most famous Italian road race for automobiles, even though it was last contested in......
Miss America, competition held annually in which young women representing each of the U.S. states, as well as the......
mixed martial arts (MMA), hybrid combat sport incorporating techniques from boxing, wrestling, judo, jujitsu, karate,......
Monopoly, real-estate board game for two to eight players, in which the player’s goal is to remain financially......
Helen Morgan was an American actress and singer whose talent was shown to greatest effect in the 1920s and ’30s......
motocross, form of motorcycle racing in which cyclists compete on a course marked out over open and often rough......
motor-paced race, in bicycle racing, a form of competition in which each bicycle racer competes behind a motorbike......
motorcycle racing, the recreational and competitive use of motorcycles, a sport practiced by both professionals......
motorcycle trial, either of two forms of motorcycle competition based on point systems, as opposed to a race for......
mountaineering, the sport of attaining, or attempting to attain, high points in mountainous regions, mainly for......
Mr. Olympia, annual bodybuilding competition sanctioned by the International Fitness and Bodybuilding Federation......
muggins, domino game similar to the regular drawing game except for the rule that if a player can play a piece......
mumblety-peg, game of skill played with a knife, usually a jackknife. The game was played as early as the 17th......
mêlée, ancient and medieval game, a predecessor of modern football (soccer), in which a round or oval object, usually......
nap, gambling card game played throughout northern Europe under various names and guises. It reached England in......
NASCAR, sanctioning body for stock-car racing in North America, founded in 1948 in Daytona Beach, Florida, and......
National Invitation Tournament (NIT), collegiate basketball competition initiated in the United States in 1938......
National Spelling Bee, spelling bee held annually in the Washington, D.C., area that serves as the culmination......
naumachia, in ancient Rome, a mimic sea battle and the specially constructed basin in which such a battle sometimes......
Negro league, any of the associations of African American baseball teams active largely between 1920 and the late......
Nemean Games, in ancient Greece, athletic and musical competitions held in honour of Zeus, in July, at the great......
net, an open fabric of thread, cord, or wire, the intersections of which are looped or knotted so as to form a......
netball, popular game in girls’ schools in England and several other British Commonwealth countries, similar to......
New York City Marathon, 26.2-mile footrace held every November through the five boroughs of New York City. The......
nim, ancient game of obscure origin in which two players alternate in removing objects from different piles, with......
Nine Men’s Morris, board game of great antiquity, most popular in Europe during the 14th century and played throughout......
ninepins, bowling game that probably originated in continental Europe during the Middle Ages. Many regional variations......
Nintendo console, groundbreaking eight-bit video game console created by Japanese designer Uemura Masayuki. The......
Nintendo Wii, electronic game console, released by the Nintendo Company of Japan in 2006. Instead of directly competing......
Nordic skiing, techniques and events that evolved in the hilly terrain of Norway and the other Scandinavian countries.......
number game, any of various puzzles and games that involve aspects of mathematics. Mathematical recreations comprise......
- Introduction
- Pioneers, Imitators
- Puzzle, Strategy, Mental
- Paradoxes, Fallacies
- Pythagorean Triples
- Geometry, Topology, Recreations
- Mazes, Puzzles, Logic
- Graphs, Networks, Math
- Manipulative, Recreations
- Puzzle, Sliding Tiles, Challenge
- Soma Cubes, Puzzle, Logic
- Logic, Inference, Puzzles
- Logical Paradoxes
numbers game, the most widespread lottery game in the United States before lottery games were legalized in many......
nyout, ancient Korean cross-and-circle board game. The nyout board, usually made of paper, consists of 29 marks......
Oaks, one of the English Classic horse races (along with the Derby, Saint Leger, Two Thousand Guineas, and One......
offroad racing, form of motor racing conducted over rough, unmarked, often desert terrain. An outgrowth of the......
old maid, simple card game popular with young children. It takes its name from a 19th-century specially illustrated......
Olympic Games, athletic festival that originated in ancient Greece and was revived in the late 19th century. Before......
- Introduction
- Women, History, Sport
- Corruption, Scandals, Bribery
- Sports, Nations, Medals
- Torch, Rings, Anthem
- Ancient Greece, Sports, Medals
- London 1908, Sports, Medals
- Berlin 1936, Nazi Germany, Jesse Owens
- Rome 1960, Italy, Sports
- Munich, Terror Attack, Medals
- Barcelona, Spain, 1992
- Beijing 2008, China, Sports
- Winter Sports, Medals, Nations
- Alpine Skiing, Figure Skating, Bobsleigh
- Innsbruck, Austria, 1964
- Lake Placid, 1980, US
- Nagano, Japan, 1998
- Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, 2010
ombre, Anglicized version of the classic Spanish card game originally called hombre (meaning “man”) and now known......
One Thousand Guineas, one of the five English Classic horse races, run over a straight mile (1.6 km) on the Rowley......
One Ton Cup, international racing trophy for sailing yachts of about one-ton displacement. From 1907 to 1955 the......
online gaming, electronic game playing over a computer network, particularly over the Internet. Electronic game......
Orange Bowl, American college postseason football game played on New Year’s Eve or New Year’s Day in Miami. It......
orienteering, outdoor competitive sport that is similar to cross-country running, but with emphasis on map-reading......
Origins of the Olympic Winter Games, The first organized international competition involving winter sports was......
Pachisi, board game, sometimes called the national game of India. Four players in opposing partnerships of two......
pacing, in horse racing, one of two gaits seen in harness racing...
paddle tennis, small-scale form of tennis similar to a British shipboard game of the 1890s. Frank P. Beal, a New......
palindrome, word, number, sentence, or verse that reads the same backward or forward. The term derives from the......
the Palio, festival of medieval origin conducted annually in certain Italian cities and featuring bareback horse......
pall-mall, (from Italian pallamaglio: palla, “ball,” and maglio, “mallet”), obsolete game of French origin, resembling......
pan, card game played only in the western United States, where it is popular as a gambling game in many clubs.......
Pan American Sports Games, quadrennial sports event for countries of the Western Hemisphere, patterned after the......
pankration, ancient Greek sports event that combined boxing and wrestling, introduced at the XXXIII Olympiad (648......
paragliding, sport of flying parachutes with design modifications that enhance their gliding capabilities. Unlike......
parallel bars, gymnastics apparatus invented in the early 19th century by the German Friedrich Ludwig Jahn, often......
Paralympic Games, major international sports competition for athletes with disabilities. Comparable to the Olympic......
pari-mutuel, method of wagering introduced in France about 1870 by Parisian businessman Pierre Oller. It became......
park, large area of ground set aside for recreation. The earliest parks were those of the Persian kings, who dedicated......
parkour, the practice of traversing obstacles in a man-made or natural environment through the use of running,......
Dolly Parton is an American country music singer, guitarist, and actress best known for pioneering the interface......
Peach Bowl, annual college football postseason bowl game played in Atlanta. Along with the Cotton, Fiesta, Orange,......
pelota, any of a number of glove, racket, or bat court games requiring a rubber-cored ball. These games arose from......
pentathlon, athletic contest entailing five distinct types of competition. In the ancient Greek Olympics, the pentathlon......
Philippe Petit is a French-born high-wire walker who attained worldwide celebrity on August 7, 1974, with his unauthorized......
PGA Championship, one of the world’s four major golf tournaments (along with the Masters Tournament, the U.S. Open,......
philately, the study of postage stamps, stamped envelopes, postmarks, postcards, and other materials relating to......
pick-up-sticks, game of skill, played by both children and adults, with thin wooden sticks or with straws or matches.......
pickleball, fast-paced sport that has many similarities to tennis, badminton, and table tennis (Ping-Pong). It......
pigeon racing, racing for sport the homing pigeon, a specialized variety developed through selective crossbreeding......
Pilates, exercise discipline created by German American gymnast, bodybuilder, and entrepreneur Joseph H. Pilates......
pinball machine, earliest of the coin-activated popular electromechanical games, usually found in candy stores,......
pinochle, American card game typically played by three players acting alone (cutthroat) or four players in two......
piquet, card game, known since the 15th century in France. For centuries piquet has been regarded as one of the......
Alexander Placide was a French-born U.S. dancer, mime, acrobat, and impresario who produced in the U.S. such diverse......
Plafond, (French: Ceiling), French card game popular in Europe in the 1920s, a predecessor of Contract Bridge.......
plain stitch, basic knitting stitch in which each loop is drawn through other loops to the right side of the fabric.......
platform tennis, sport that is a combination of tennis and squash, devised in 1928 by American sports enthusiasts......
play, in zoology, behaviour performed in the absence of normal stimuli or behaviour elicited by normal stimuli......
PlayStation, video game console released in 1994 by Sony Computer Entertainment. The PlayStation, one of a new......
pocket billiards, a billiards game, most popular in the United States and Canada, played with a white cue ball......
point-to-point, race run during the non-hunting season (February to May) by horses regularly ridden at fox hunts.......
poker, card game, played in various forms throughout the world, in which a player must call (i.e., match) the bet,......
poker dice, game involving five dice specially marked to simulate a playing-card deck’s top six cards (ace, king,......