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Meaning of run-in | Babel Free

Noun CEFR C2 Specialized

Definitions

  1. An encounter; a scrape or brush, especially one involving trouble or difficulty.
  2. The end-phase of a competition etc.
  3. A sudden compression between two coupled railcars when the hinder one is moving faster than the fore one.

Equivalents

Español encontronazo roce
Nederlands finale
Русский стычка

Examples

“During that time he had two more run-ins with the law. One involved the sale of stolen property. The other was for a series of hot checks.”
“Yahoo Sport's Leicester City blogger Helen Nutter gets ready for the Premier League run-in knowing her side - incredibly - still have a great chance of being crowned champions”
“But despite its plague of tunnels, the run-in on this route is of unusual interest to the locomotive enthusiast: besides the hordes of self-important saddle-tanks shunting in the extensive yards, there was at one time the chance of seeing those slender little North London engines, with their large outside cylinders and no visible storage place for coal, and also an occasional South Eastern locomotive sporting a lot of polished brass.”
“Brake pipe pressure reduction rates of over 30 psi/sec lasting for about 15 milliseconds were created by harsh slack run-ins.”
“Researchers noted no unusual events (e.g., knuckle breaks) or notable instances of significant slack action or run-ins/run-outs at the lead locomotive during the test.”

CEFR level

C2
Mastery
This word is part of the CEFR C2 vocabulary — mastery level.

See also

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