0
User_gary Posted 16 years ago
Grammar

Drills it away wristily

Razzak to Gambhir, 1 run, steps out once and drills it away wristily but he cant beat long on

Could you please explain to me what "drills it away" and "wristily" means in this context?

It's a commentator sentence of a cricket match. Razzak is bowling and Gambhir is batting. Gambhir to hit the ball stepped out once and then .....(drills it away wristily)
  

Top answer

Hi, drill a ball - hit/throw it hard and accurately. wristily - I've never heard this adverb, but it clearly suggests doing something with a lot of wrist movement. Clive

  • Hi, drill a ball - hit/throw it hard and accurately.
  • wristily - I've never heard this adverb, but it clearly suggests doing something with a lot of wrist movement.
  • Clive
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

1 Answers
0
Hi,

drill a ball - hit/throw it hard and accurately.

wristily - I've never heard this adverb, but it clearly suggests doing something with a lot of wrist movement.

Clive

Related Questions