the punter(s)

  • 1Punter (football) — Shane Lechler of the Oakland Raiders punts the ball in November 2008 …

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  • 2Punter (American football) — A punter (P) in American or Canadian football is a special teams player who receives the snapped ball directly from the line of scrimmage and then punts (kicks) the football to the opposing team so as to limit any field position advantage. The… …

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  • 3Punter (protocol) — Punter is a generic term referring to any of various protocols for file transfer developed in the 1980s by Steve Punter, or their variants. Contents 1 PET Transfer Protocol 2 What It Looked Like to the User 3 C1 3.1 …

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  • 4punter — punt‧er [ˈpʌntə ǁ ər] noun [countable] informal 1. a person who tries to make money buying and selling shares etc on a financial market: • Such privatisations are aimed more at the general punter than the industrial investor. • punters on the… …

    Financial and business terms

  • 5Punter — The word punter may refer to: * A man with great prestige, humble but yet beloved by fellow colleagues; aka the man * A British, Australian and Hiberno (Irish) English colloquial term for a paying guest or customer, especially ** a patron of a… …

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  • 6punter — • Our choice of venue is usually the Mermaid Restaurant, where punters can dine al fresco at white plastic tables, rain or shine, in season or out Daily Telegraph, 1992. This meaning of punter, ‘a customer or client’, developed in the 1960s from… …

    Modern English usage

  • 7Punter — Punt er, n. [Cf. F. ponte. See {Punt}, v. t.] One who punts; specifically, one who plays against the banker or dealer, as in baccara and faro. Hoyle. [1913 Webster] …

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • 8The Cure — The Cure …

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  • 9The Bill (series 11) — The Bill Series 11 Country of origin United Kingdom No. of episodes 149 Broadcast Original channel ITV …

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  • 10The Sportsman (newspaper) — The Sportsman was the title of two separate British newspapers which are now defunct. The first Sportsman paper ran from 1865 to 1924. A separate and totally unrelated Sportsman title appeared for seven months in 2006.1865 to 1924 versionThe… …

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