0 the ability to keep doing something difficult, unpleasant, or painful for a long time:
1 used to describe sports or activities that demand the ability to make a lot of physical effort over a long period of time, or people or animals who do these:
Studies of elite sprinters reveal their leg muscles have more fast-twitch fibres, while marathon runners and other endurance athletes have more slow-twitch.
For endurance runners, performance is mainly a question of how efficiently the body can take in and burn oxygen.
In endurance sports, you can actually improve as you get older.
Smoothies are the drink of choice for many endurance athletes in need of quick protein and carbs for recovery.
Soccer really is an endurance sport.
He does speed training every morning and endurance training twice a week.
The horse has been a speed racer, endurance racer, trail rider and prize winning show stallion.
Elimination reasons were similar to other endurance races9,26,27.
Analysts are bewildered by the exceptional endurance exhibited by most democratic administrations.
Frailty manifests the following core clinical features: loss of strength, weight loss, low levels of activity, poor endurance or fatigue, and slowed performance.
The arm hang and the sit-ups, both tasks requiring a certain degree of muscular endurance, load on a third factor for boys and girls.
中文繁体
忍耐力,耐受力…
More中文简体
忍耐力,耐受力…
MoreEspañol
aguante, resistencia, resistencia [feminine]…
MorePortuguês
resistência…
More日本語
耐久力…
MoreTürk dili
tahammül, dayanma gücü, sabır ve sebat gösterme…
MoreFrançais
endurance [feminine], endurance, de résistance…
MoreCatalan
resistència, fortalesa…
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