streak
n. countablen. a series of days or times in a row when you do the same thing. People often use it to talk about winning games or keeping a daily habit.
n. a continuous period of specified success or a repeated behavior. Often used in gaming or productivity contexts to describe an unbroken sequence of daily activity.
I have a fifty-day study streak on my language app.
The basketball team finally lost a game after a ten-match winning streak.
Maintaining a daily meditation streak can provide a powerful psychological incentive to continue the practice, as the fear of breaking the chain outweighs the desire to skip a session.
From Middle English streke, from Old English strica, from Proto-Germanic strikiz, from Proto-Indo-European streyg- (“line”). Related to North Frisian strijck, Old Saxon striki, Middle Low German streke, Low German streek, Danish streg, Swedish streck, Norwegian Bokmål strek, Icelandic stryk, strykr, Dutch streek, Afrikaans streek, Old High German strih, German Strich, Gothic 𐍃𐍄𐍂𐌹𐌺𐍃 (striks).
Commonly followed by 'of' plus a noun phrase, such as 'a streak of bad luck' or 'a winning streak'.