track
Americannoun
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a structure consisting of a pair of parallel lines of rails with their crossties, on which a railroad train, trolley, or the like runs.
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a wheel rut.
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evidence, as a mark or a series of marks, that something has passed.
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Usually tracks footprints or other marks left by an animal, person, or vehicle.
a lion's tracks; car tracks.
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a path made or beaten by or as if by the feet of people or animals; trail.
to follow the track of a murderer.
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a line of travel or motion.
the track of a bird.
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a course or route followed.
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a course of action, conduct, or procedure.
on the right track to solve the problem.
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a path or course made or laid out for some particular purpose.
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a series or sequence of events or ideas.
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something associated with making a track, as the wheel span of a vehicle or the tread of a tire.
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a caterpillar tread.
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Sports.
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a course laid out for running or racing.
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the group of sports performed on such a course, as running or hurdling, as distinguished from field events.
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both track and field events as a whole.
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Recording.
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a band of recorded sound laid along the length of a magnetic tape.
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band.
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an individual song or segment of a recording.
a title track.
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a discrete, separate recording that is combined with other parts of a musical recording to produce the final aural version.
a special rhythm track added to the basic track.
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Automotive. the distance between the centers of the treads of either the front or rear wheels of a vehicle.
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Computers. a data-recording path on a storage medium, as a magnetic disk, tape, or drum, that is accessible to a read-write head in a given position as the medium moves past.
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Slang. tracks, needle marks on the arm, leg, or body of a drug user caused by habitual injections.
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sound track.
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a metal strip or rail along which something, as lighting or a curtain, can be mounted or moved.
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Education. a study program or level of curriculum to which a student is assigned on the basis of aptitude or need; academic course or path.
verb (used with object)
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to follow or pursue the track, traces, or footprints of.
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to follow (a track, course, etc.).
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to make one's way through; traverse.
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to leave footprints on (often followed by up oron ).
to track the floor with muddy shoes.
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to make a trail of footprints with (dirt, snow, or the like).
The dog tracked mud all over the living room rug.
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to observe or monitor the course or path of (an aircraft, rocket, satellite, star, etc.), as by radar or radio signals.
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to observe or follow the course of progress of; keep track of.
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to furnish with a track or tracks, as for railroad trains.
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Railroads. to have (a certain distance) between wheels, runners, rails, etc.
verb (used without object)
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to follow or pursue a track or trail.
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to run in the same track, as the wheels of a vehicle.
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to be in alignment, as one gearwheel with another.
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to have a specified span between wheels or runners.
The car's wheels track about five feet.
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Movies, Television. dolly.
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Recording. to follow the undulations in the grooves of a phonograph record.
verb phrase
idioms
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lose track, to fail to keep informed; neglect to keep a record.
He soon lost track of how much money he had spent.
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make tracks, to go or depart in a hurry.
to make tracks for the store before closing time.
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keep track, to be aware; keep informed.
Have you been keeping track of the time?
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on the track of, in search or pursuit of; close upon.
They are on the track of a solution to the problem.
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in one's tracks, in the spot in which one is or is standing at the moment.
He stopped dead in his tracks, listening for the sound to be repeated.
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off the track, departing from the objective or the subject at hand; astray.
He can't tell a story without getting off the track.
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on the wrong / right side of the tracks, from a poor or wealthy part of a community or of society.
born on the wrong side of the tracks.
noun
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the mark or trail left by something that has passed by
the track of an animal
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any road or path affording passage, esp a rough one
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a rail or pair of parallel rails on which a vehicle, such as a locomotive, runs, esp the rails together with the sleepers, ballast, etc, on a railway
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a course of action, thought, etc
don't start on that track again!
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a line of motion or travel, such as flight
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an endless jointed metal band driven by the wheels of a vehicle such as a tank or tractor to enable it to move across rough or muddy ground
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physics the path of a particle of ionizing radiation as observed in a cloud chamber, bubble chamber, or photographic emulsion
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a course for running or racing
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( as modifier )
track events
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sports performed on a track
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track and field events as a whole
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a path on a magnetic recording medium, esp magnetic tape, on which information, such as music or speech, from a single input channel is recorded
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any of a number of separate sections in the recording on a record, CD, or cassette
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a metal path that makes the interconnections on an integrated circuit
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the distance between the points of contact with the ground of a pair of wheels, such as the front wheels of a motor vehicle or the paired wheels of an aircraft undercarriage
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a hypothetical trace made on the surface of the earth by a point directly below an aircraft in flight
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to follow the passage, course, or progress of
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to fail to follow the passage, course, or progress of
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See beaten
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away from what is correct or true
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on the scent or trail of; pursuing
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the correct line of investigation, inquiry, etc
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the incorrect line of investigation, inquiry, etc
verb
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to follow the trail of (a person, animal, etc)
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to follow the flight path of (a satellite, spacecraft, etc) by picking up radio or radar signals transmitted or reflected by it
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railways
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to provide with a track
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to run on a track of (a certain width)
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(of a camera or camera operator) to follow (a moving object) in any direction while operating
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to move (a camera) towards the scene ( track in ) or away from the scene ( track out )
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to follow a track through (a place)
to track the jungles
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(intr) (of the pick-up, stylus, etc, of a record player) to follow the groove of a record
the pick-up tracks badly
Other Word Forms
- multitrack verb (used with object)
- retrack verb
- trackability noun
- trackable adjective
- tracker noun
- untrackable adjective
Etymology
Origin of track
First recorded in 1425–75; late Middle English noun trak, tracke, from Old French trac, perhaps of Germanic origin; compare Old Norse trathk “trodden spot,” Norwegian trakke “to trample”; akin to tread
Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
The first track boomed, a Bad Bunny number remixed with a salsa beat, and people started filing in.
From Los Angeles Times • Apr. 4, 2026
They went on to collaborate on a musical track Cave describes as “becoming a slowly evolving cosmic dance, in the form of a reconciliation and an apology.”
From Salon • Apr. 4, 2026
The music coheres into one loud, unbroken suite, and yet each track possesses its own character and dynamics.
From The Wall Street Journal • Apr. 4, 2026
But "there was no easy way to actually try and track him down because they literally just had to go searching through the bush", says Hurley.
From BBC • Apr. 3, 2026
Then we jog back around the track until we reach the water fountain, where we take turns drinking.
From "Keeping Pace" by Laurie Morrison
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.