tennis

[ten-is] /ˈtɛn ɪs/
noun
1.
a game played on a rectangular court by two players or two pairs of players equipped with rackets, in which a ball is driven back and forth over a low net that divides the court in half.
Compare lawn tennis.
Origin
1350-1400; Middle English tenetz, ten(e)ys < Anglo-French: take!, imperative plural of tenir to hold, take, receive, apparently used as a server's call
Examples from the web for tennis
  • None of us were particularly good at tennis-or at golf, either, for that matter.
  • Harry had a bookish appearance but excelled at tennis, football, gymnastics and other sports.
  • The same holds for picking which tennis player is likely to win a match.
  • No matter how you turn a tennis ball, it does not alter the ball's appearance.
  • It's akin to a hundred tennis players serving a ball to you and you return everyone with with a quick effortless ease.
  • Even a jog in high heels was better for joints than specialized tennis shoes.
  • She is average at her high school work and she is involved in school tennis in summer and netball in winter.
  • They care no more about evolution than they do about the history of tennis rackets.
  • For hundreds of years eyewitnesses have reported brief encounters with the golf ball- to tennis ball-size orbs of electricity.
  • The same universal laws seems to govern player rankings in sports as diverse as tennis, fencing, snooker and many others.
British Dictionary definitions for tennis

tennis

/ˈtɛnɪs/
noun
1.
  1. a racket game played between two players or pairs of players who hit a ball to and fro over a net on a rectangular court of grass, asphalt, clay, etc See also lawn tennis, real tennis, court tennis, table tennis
  2. (as modifier): tennis court, tennis racket
Word Origin
C14: probably from Anglo-French tenetz hold (imperative), from Old French tenir to hold, from Latin tenēre
Word Origin and History for tennis
n.

mid-14c., most likely from Anglo-French tenetz "hold! receive! take!," from Old French tenez, imperative of tenir "to hold, receive, take," which was used as a call from the server to his opponent. The original version of the game (a favorite sport of medieval French knights) was played by striking the ball with the palm of the hand, and in Old French was called la paulme, literally "the palm," but to an onlooker the service cry would naturally seem to identify the game.

The use of the word for the modern game is from 1874, short for lawn tennis, which originally was called sphairistike (1873), from Greek sphairistike (tekhne) "(skill) in playing at ball," from the root of sphere. It was invented, and named, by Maj. Walter C. Wingfield and first played at a garden party in Wales, inspired by the popularity of badminton.

The name 'sphairistike,' however, was impossible (if only because people would pronounce it as a word of three syllables to rhyme with 'pike') and it was soon rechristened. ["Times" of London, June 10, 1927]