English-Thai Dictionary
crick
N อาการ เจ็บ จาก กล้ามเนื้อ ตึง spasm cramp kink ar-kan-jeb-jak-klam-nuea-tueng
cricket
N กีฬา คริก เก็ต ki-la-karik-ked
cricket
N จิ้งหรีด jing-rid
cricket
VI เล่น คริก เก็ต len-karik-ked
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
CRICK
n.[See Creak. ] 1. The creaking of a door. [Not used. ]
2. A spasmodic affection of some part of the body, as of the neck or back; local spasm or cramp.
CRICKET
n.An insect of the genus Gryllus, belonging to the order of Hemipters. There are several species, so named probably on account of their creaking or chirping voice. The cricket chirping in the hearth.
CRICKET
n. 1. A play or exercise with bats and ball.
2. A low stool.
CRICKETER
n.One who plays at cricket.
CRICKET-MATCH
n.A match at cricket.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
CRICK
Crick (krk ), n. Etym: [See Creak. ]
Defn: The creaking of a door, or a noise resembling it. [Obs. ] Johnson.
CRICK
Crick, n. Etym: [The same as creek a bending, twisting. See Creek, Crook. ]
1. A painful, spasmodic affection of the muscles of some part of the body, as of the neck or back, rendering it difficult to move the part. To those also that, with a crick or cramp, have thei necks drawn backward. Holland.
2. Etym: [Cf. F. cric. ]
Defn: A small jackscrew. Knight.
CRICKET
Crick "et (krk "t ), n. Etym: [OE. criket, OF. crequet, criquet; prob. of German origin, and akin to E. creak; cf. D. kriek a cricket. See Creak. ] (Zoöl.)
Defn: An orthopterous insect of the genus Gryllus, and allied genera. The males make chirping, musical notes by rubbing together the basal parts of the veins of the front wings.
Note: The common European cricket is Gryllus domesticus; the common large black crickets of America are G. niger, G. neglectus, and others. Balm cricket. See under Balm. -- Cricket bird, a small European bird (Silvia locustella ); --called also grasshopper warbler. -- Cricket frog, a small American tree frog (Acris gryllus ); -- so called from its chirping.
CRICKET
Crick "et, n. Etym: [AS. cricc, crycc, crooked staff, crutch. Perh.first used in sense 1, a stool prob. having been first used as a wicket. See Crutch. ]
1. A low stool.
2. A game much played in England, and sometimes in America, with a ball, bats, and wickets, the players being arranged in two contesting parties or sides.
3. (Arch. )
Defn: A small false roof, or the raising of a portion of a roof, so as to throw off water from behind an obstacle, such as a chimney.
CRICKET
CRICKET Crick "et, v. i.
Defn: To play at cricket. Tennyson.
CRICKETER
CRICKETER Crick "et *er (krk "t-r ), n.
Defn: One who plays at cricket.
New American Oxford Dictionary
crick
crick 1 |krik krɪk | ▶noun a painful stiff feeling in the neck or back. ▶verb [ with obj. ] twist or strain (one's neck or back ), causing painful stiffness: (as adj. cricked ) : he suffered a cricked neck during tackling practice. ORIGIN late Middle English: of unknown origin.
crick
crick 2 |krik krɪk | ▶noun dialect a creek.
Crick, Francis
Crick, Francis |krik ˈkrɪk | (1916 –2004 ), English biophysicist; full name Francis Harry Compton Crick. With James Watson, he proposed the double helix structure of the DNA molecule, thus broadly explaining how genetic information is carried in living organisms and how genes replicate. Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine (1962 ), shared with Watson and Maurice Wilkins.
cricket
crick et 1 |ˈkrikit ˈkrɪkɪt | ▶noun an insect related to the grasshoppers. The male produces a characteristic rhythmical chirping sound. [Family Gryllidae: many genera and species, including the field cricket and the house cricket. ] ORIGIN Middle English: from Old French criquet, from criquer ‘to crackle, ’ of imitative origin.
cricket
crick et 2 |ˈkrɪkɪt ˈkrikit | ▶noun an open-air game played on a large grass field with ball, bats, and two wickets, between teams of eleven players, the object of the game being to score more runs than the opposition. Cricket is played mainly in Britain and in territories formerly under British rule, including Australia, South Africa, the West Indies, New Zealand, and the Indian subcontinent. The full game with two innings per side can last several days; shorter matches are usual at the amateur level and have become popular at the professional level since the 1960s. PHRASES not cricket Brit. informal a thing contrary to traditional standards of fairness or rectitude. DERIVATIVES crick et er noun, crick et ing adjective ORIGIN late 16th cent.: of unknown origin.
cricket
crick et 3 |ˈkrikit ˈkrɪkɪt | ▶noun a low stool, typically with a rectangular or oval seat and four legs splayed out.
Oxford Dictionary
crick
crick 1 |krɪk | ▶noun a painful stiff feeling in the neck or back. ▶verb [ with obj. ] twist or strain (one's neck or back ), causing painful stiffness: (as adj. cricked ) : he suffered a cricked neck during tackling practice. ORIGIN late Middle English: of unknown origin.
crick
crick 2 |krik krɪk | ▶noun dialect a creek.
Crick, Francis
Crick |krɪk | (1916 –2004 ), English biophysicist; full name Francis Harry Compton Crick. Together with J. D. Watson he proposed the double helix structure of the DNA molecule, thus broadly explaining how genetic information is carried in living organisms and how genes replicate. Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine (1962, shared with Watson and M. H. F. Wilkins ).
cricket
cricket 1 |ˈkrɪkɪt | ▶noun an insect related to the grasshoppers but with shorter legs. The male produces a characteristic musical chirping sound. ●Family Gryllidae: many genera and species, including the field cricket and the house cricket. • used in names of insects of related families, e.g. bush cricket, mole cricket. ORIGIN Middle English: from Old French criquet, from criquer ‘to crackle ’, of imitative origin.
cricket
cricket 2 |ˈkrɪkɪt | ▶noun [ mass noun ] an open-air game played on a large grass field with ball, bats, and two wickets, between teams of eleven players, the object of the game being to score more runs than the opposition. Cricket is played mainly in Britain and in territories formerly under British rule, such as Australia, South Africa, the West Indies, New Zealand, and the Indian subcontinent. The full game with two innings per side can last several days; shorter single-innings matches are usual at amateur level and have become popular at professional level since the 1960s. PHRASES a cricket score Brit. informal (in sports other than cricket ) an unusually high score: England looked set to run up a cricket score when they went four tries ahead. not cricket Brit. informal something contrary to traditional standards of fairness or rectitude. DERIVATIVES cricketer noun, cricketing adjective ORIGIN late 16th cent.: of unknown origin.
cricket
crick et 3 |ˈkrikit ˈkrɪkɪt | ▶noun a low stool, typically with a rectangular or oval seat and four legs splayed out.
American Oxford Thesaurus
crick
crick noun a crick in my neck: kink, pinch, knot, strain, stiffness.
Oxford Thesaurus
crick
crick noun he got a crick in the neck from keeping his head down: cramp, spasm, muscle spasm, muscular contraction, rick, kink, twinge, pang, pain, shooting pain, ache; stiffness, discomfort, tenderness, soreness. ▶verb he cricked his neck during practice: strain, sprain, pull, wrench, tear, twist, rick; injure, hurt, damage, impair.
Duden Dictionary
Cricket
Cri cket , das Kricket |Cr i cket |
French Dictionary
cricket
cricket n. m. nom masculin Sport anglais. : Sais-tu jouer au cricket? Note Sémantique Ne pas confondre avec le nom criquet, insecte. Prononciation Le t se prononce, [krikɛt ]; le nom rime avec coquette
Spanish Dictionary
cricket
cricket nombre masculino Críquet .
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
crick
crick /krɪk /名詞 C 【首 腰などの 】(突然の )けいれん, 筋違い «in » .動詞 他動詞 …の筋を違える, …をけいれんさせる .
cricket
crick et 1 /krɪ́kət /〖擬音語 〗名詞 C 1 〘虫 〙コオロギ 〘鳴き声はchirp 〙.2 コオロギのように鳴るおもちゃ .
cricket
crick et 2 /krɪ́kət /〖球を打つ音がコオロギの鳴き声に似ていることから 〗名詞 U クリケット 〘英国で盛んな野球に似た戸外の球技; 11人の選手からなるチーム2つで対戦する 〙.be n ò t cr í cket ⦅英 くだけて やや古 ⦆公明正大 [フェアプレー ]ではない ▸ It's (just ) not cricket .それはフェアなやり方ではない 動詞 自動詞 クリケットをする .~er 名詞 C クリケット競技者 .~ing 形容詞 クリケットをする ; クリケットの [に関する ].