SPORTED
Verb
sported
simple past tense and past participle of sport
Anagrams
• deports, desport, red tops, red-tops, redtops, spot-red
Source: Wiktionary
SPORT
Sport, n. Etym: [Abbreviated frm disport.]
1. That which diverts, and makes mirth; pastime; amusement.
It is as sport a fool do mischief. prov. x. 23.
Her sports were such as carried riches of knowledge upon the stream
of delight. Sir P. Sidney.
Think it but a minute spent in sport. Shak.
2. Mock; mockery; contemptuous mirth; derision.
Then make sport at me; then let me be your jest.Shak.
3. That with which one plays, or which is driven about in play; a
toy; a plaything; an object of mockery.
Flitting leaves, the sport of every wind. Dryden.
Never does man appear to greater disadvantage than when he is the
sport of his own ungoverned pasions. John Clarke.
4. Play; idle jingle.
An author who should introduce such a sport of words upon our stage
would meet with small applause. Broome.
5. Diversion of the field, as fowling, hunting, fishing, racing,
games, and the like, esp. when money is staked.
6. (Bot. & Zoöl.)
Definition: A plant or an animal, or part of a plant or animal, which has
some peculiarity not usually seen in the species; an abnormal variety
or growth. See Sporting plant, under Sporting.
7. A sportsman; a gambler. [Slang] In sport, in jest; for play or
diversion. "So is the man that deceiveth his neighbor, and saith, Am
not I in sport" Prov. xxvi. 19.
Syn.
– Play; game; diversion; frolic; mirth; mock; mockery; jeer.
Sport, v. i. [imp. & p. p. Sported; p. pr. & vb. n. Sporting.]
1. To play; to frolic; to wanton.
[Fish], sporting with quick glance, Show to the sun their waved coats
dropt with gold. Milton.
2. To practice the diversions of the field or the turf; to be given
to betting, as upon races.
3. To trifle. "He sports with his own life." Tillotson.
4. (Bot. & Zoöl.)
Definition: To assume suddenly a new and different character from the rest
of the plant or from the type of the species; -- said of a bud,
shoot, plant, or animal. See Sport, n., 6. Darwin.
Syn.
– To play; frolic; game; wanton.
Sport, v. t.
1. To divert; to amuse; to make merry; -- used with the reciprocal
pronoun.
Against whom do ye sport yourselves Isa. lvii. 4.
2. To represent by any knd of play.
Now sporting on thy lyre the loves of youth. Dryden.
3. To exhibit, or bring out, in public; to use or wear; as, to sport
a new equipage. [Colloq.] Grose.
4. To give utterance to in a sportive manner; to throw out in an easy
and copious manner; -- with off; as, to sport off epigrams. Addison.
To sport one's oak. See under Oak, n.
Source: Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary 1913 Edition