Race
Race (rās) , transitive verb
Race (rās) , noun
[Old French raiz, Latin radix, -icis. See Radix.]
Collocations (1)
Race , noun
[French race; compare Pr. & Sp. raza, Italian razza; all from Old High German reiza line, akin to English write. See Write.]
Naturalists and ethnographers divide mankind into several distinct varieties, or races. Cuvier refers them all to three, Pritchard enumerates seven, Agassiz eight, Pickering describes eleven. One of the common classifications is that of Blumenbach, who makes five races: the Caucasian, or white race, to which belong the greater part of the European nations and those of Western Asia; the Mongolian, or yellow race, occupying Tartary, China, Japan, etc.; the Ethiopian, or negro race, occupying most of Africa (except the north), Australia, Papua, and other Pacific Islands; the American, or red race, comprising the Indians of North and South America; and the Malayan, or brown race, which occupies the islands of the Indian Archipelago, etc. Many recent writers classify the Malay and American races as branches of the Mongolian. See Illustration in Appendix.
Race , noun
[Old English ras, res, rees, Anglo-Saxon ras a rush, running; akin to Icelandic rās course, race. r118.]
The part of the channel above the wheel is sometimes called the headrace, the part below, the tailrace.
Collocations (9)
Race (rāst) , intransitive verb
Race , transitive verb