: to produce by or as if by printing—usually used with off
ran off 10,000 copies of the first edition
b(1)
: to carry in a printed or broadcast medium
every news outlet ran the story
(2)
: to appear in print or a broadcast medium
The show ran for five seasons.
14
a
: to make (a series of counts) without a miss
run 19 in an inning in billiards
b
: to lead winning cards of (a suit) successively
c
: to alter by addition
ran his record to six wins and four losses
15
: to make (a golf ball) roll forward after alighting
16
baseball: to eject (a player, coach, or manager) from a game
Ron Luciano ran Weaver early in game one of a doubleheader in 1975, and then ran him again during the lineup meeting prior to the start of game two.—Jeff Burd
The past tense run still survives in speech in southern England and in the speech especially of older people in some parts of the U.S. It was formerly used in literature, and was a standard variant in our dictionaries from 1828 until 1934. Grammarians have generally opposed it, and many people consider it nonstandard. Just about everybody uses ran in writing now.
Verb
How fast can you run?
He runs faster than anyone else on the team.
She ran up the stairs to get her jacket.
We ran for the train—but missed it.
I heard her scream and ran to help.
She ran to me for help.
The dog ran away from me.
The dog ran toward me.
When I called the dog, he came running.
Don't expect me to come running every time you want something. I'm not your servant. Noun
He goes for a six-mile run every evening.
She took the dogs out for a run.
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Verb
This suited Salah and Gakpo, who could play high and wide and run behind.—Liam Tharme, New York Times, 12 Dec. 2025 Authorities added that the adult coach of the team had been running behind the athletes when the incident occurred, reported CBS News.—Gabrielle Rockson, PEOPLE, 11 Dec. 2025
Noun
Her rocket-ship run comes at an opportune time.—Sean Gregory, Time, 10 Dec. 2025 That being said, the team has quite a bit of work to do to make a run.—Evan Massey, MSNBC Newsweek, 10 Dec. 2025 See All Example Sentences for run
Word History
Etymology
Verb
Middle English ronnen, alteration of rinnen, intransitive verb (from Old English iernan, rinnan & Old Norse rinna) & of rennen, transitive verb, from Old Norse renna; akin to Old High German rinnan, intransitive verb, "to run," Sanskrit riṇāti "he causes to flow," and probably to Latin rivus "stream"
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