View example sentences and word forms for Eagled.

Eagled

Eagled | Eagles | Eagling

Eagled meaning

simple past and past participle of eagle

Example sentences (11)

The American, who eagled the 18th at St Andrews in a stunning 64 last year to grab second, gave himself a chance again with a fine 66.

Dings eagled, and Shah bogeyed for a two-stroke win.

He holed five birdies on the front nine and as he eagled the 18th, Young was hitting a double-bogey on the seventh, and when the American followed up with a bogey on the next, McIlroy was in the clubhouse with the overall lead.

Horschel eagled the second extra hole to win the DP World Tour’s flagship event after he, McIlroy and Thriston Lawrence had finished tied on 20 under par.

I don’t care what I look like while gaming (if you peered into my living room window while I was in the middle of a session you’d see me spread-eagled on the couch covered in food crumbs), and am more about comfort, which these afford.

Englishman Casey, who has one top-five finish in 13 Masters appearances and missed the cut last year, eagled the par-five second hole, his 11th, en route to a seven-under-par 65 that left him two shots clear of Webb Simpson and Xander Schauffele.

It is the sort of innocuous incident that may have passed the officials by in previous seasons, but the presence of the eagled-eye VAR cameras means nothing is now missed.

Named after the second largest lake in Nepal and cooked on a large cast iron frying pan called a tawa, they were spread-eagled and ripped free of their beautifully-charred bright orange shells with a satisfying tug of the fork.

Npfl need to sit up, if they can produce the best of players in this present Chan eagled, producing a striker who find it hard to shoot at goal.

Archer, a Sydney "outsider" who drew scant favour in the betting, spread-eagled the field and defeated the favourite, and Victorian champion, Mormon by six lengths.

Much later, in the 1960s, it was established that the zone of levelled forest occupied an area of some convert, its shape resembling a gigantic spread-eagled butterfly with a "wingspan" of convert and a "body length" of convert.