Snickometer

English

Alternative forms

  • snickometer

Etymology

From snick +‎ -ometer.

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /ˌsnɪkˈɒm.ə.tə(ɹ)/
  • Audio (General Australian):(file)

Noun

Snickometer (plural Snickometers)

  1. (cricket) a device that combines slow-motion video and a graphical representation of sound waves recorded from stump and pitch microphones to determine whether a small noise (a snick) occurred as the ball passed the bat and/or pad, and thus whether the batsman made contact with the ball.
    • 1999 July 7, L. Hibbert, “Decisions you can't argue with”, in Professional Engineering[1], volume 12, number 13, →ISSN, pages 26–27:
      In cricket, there is the "third eye" to decide close run-out decisions, and also Channel 4 is introducing a technological innovation called Snickometer designed to end debates whether or not a batsman has actually made contact with the ball.
    • 2002, Mark Nicholas, Jargonbusting: Mastering The Art of Cricket[2], Channel 4 Books, foreword of original by Simon Hughes, →ISBN, Foreword, page 6:
      Alongside the snickometer moments there was the Saturday morning Roadshow, the Analyst, Jargonbusting, a sympathetic interview, an orginal feature, an e-mail question answered.
    • 2007, Robert MacGregor, I Can't Take Any More Crap![3], Troubador Publishing, →ISBN, Umpiring, Cricket, Test Matches, Bad, page 237:
      And we have the Snickometer to put beyond doubt whether the batsman touched the ball with his bat or gloves and not his ear or his arse.

Derived terms

See also