. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
you have here. The definition of the word
will help you to be more precise and correct when speaking or writing your texts. Knowing the definition of
, as well as those of other words, enriches your vocabulary and provides you with more and better linguistic resources.
English
cricket on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Pronunciation
Etymology 1
From Middle English creket , crykett , crykette , from Old French criket (with diminutive -et ) from criquer ( “ to make a cracking sound; creak ” ) , from Middle Dutch kricken ( “ to creak; crack ” ) , from Proto-West Germanic *krakōn , from Proto-Germanic *krakōną , related to Middle English creken , criken ( “ to creak ” ) , all ultimately of imitative origin.
Compare Dutch kriek ( “ cricket ” ) , Middle Dutch krikel , criekel , crekel ( “ cricket ” ) (with diminituve -el ), Middle Low German krikel , krekel ( “ cricket ” ) , German Kreckel ( “ cricket ” ) . More at creak .
Noun
cricket (plural crickets )
An insect in the order Orthoptera , especially family Gryllidae , that makes a chirping sound by rubbing its wing casings against combs on its hind legs .
( US , slang , humorous , in the plural ) In the form crickets : absolute silence ; no communication .
A signalling device used by soldiers in hostile territory to identify themselves to a friendly in low visibility conditions.
( aviation , slang ) An aural warning sound consisting of a continuously -repeating chime , designed to be difficult for pilots to ignore .
Derived terms
Translations
insect
Afrikaans: kriek (af)
Albanian: bulkth (sq) m
Amharic: ዋዝንቢት ( waznəbit )
Arabic: جُدْجُد m ( judjud ) , صُرْصُر m ( ṣurṣur ) , صُرْصُور m ( ṣurṣūr )
Moroccan Arabic: صرصور m ( ṣarṣūr )
Armenian: ճռիկ (hy) ( čṙik )
Assamese: উঁইচিৰিঙা ( ũisiriṅa )
Azerbaijani: sisəy
Banjarese: jengkerék
Basque: kilker
Belarusian: цвырку́н m ( cvyrkún )
Bulgarian: щуре́ц (bg) m ( šturéc )
Burmese: ပုရစ် (my) ( pu.rac )
Catalan: grill (ca) m
Chamicuro: c̈ho'kota
Cherokee: ᏔᎳᏚ ( taladu )
Chinese:
Cantonese: 蟋蟀 ( sik1 seot1 )
Eastern Min: 蟋蟀 ( sék-sáuk )
Hakka: 土狗仔 ( tuˋ gieuˋ eˋ )
Hokkien: 杜猴 (zh-min-nan) ( tōo-kâu )
Mandarin: 蟋蟀 (zh) ( xīshuài )
Chittagonian: জিনি পুঁক ( zini fuñk )
Comanche: tuaahtaki
Cornish: gryll m
Czech: cvrček m
Danish: fårekylling c
Dutch: krekel (nl) m
Emilian: gril m
Esperanto: grilo
Estonian: kilk (et)
Faroese: veggjasmiður m , veggjasmyril m
Finnish: sirkka (fi)
French: grillon (fr) m , cri-cri (fr) m , criquet (fr) m
Galician: grilo (gl) m , ralo m , rilo m , corta f
Georgian: ჭრიჭინა (ka) ( č̣rič̣ina )
German: Grille (de) f
Greek: γρύλος (el) m ( grýlos ) , τριζόνι (el) n ( trizóni )
Ancient: γρύλλος m ( grúllos )
Guaraní: kyju (gn)
Gujarati: ક્રિકેટ n ( krikeṭ )
Hebrew: צְרָצַר (he) m ( tsratsár ) ( modern ) צַרְצוּר m ( tzartzúr ) ( talmudic )
Hindi: झींगुर m ( jhīṅgur ) , झीँगुर (hi) m ( jhī̃gur )
Hungarian: tücsök (hu)
Icelandic: krybba f
Ido: grilio (io)
Irish: criogar m , píobaire (an) teallaigh m , píobaire gríosaí m , urchuil f
Italian: grillo (it) m
Japanese: コオロギ (ja) ( kōrogi ) , 蟋蟀 (ja) ( こおろぎ, kōrogi )
Javanese: jangkrik (jv)
Kapampangan: lipaktung , kamaru
Karachay-Balkar: сенгирчке ( señirçke )
Kazakh: қара шегіртке ( qara şegırtke )
Khmer: ចង្រិត (km) ( cɑngrət )
Kongo: nzenze
Korean: 귀뚜라미 (ko) ( gwitturami )
Kurdish:
Central Kurdish: کولە ( kule )
Kyrgyz: кара чегиртке ( kara cegirtke )
Lao: ຈີ່ລໍ່ ( chī lǭ )
Latin: gryllus (la) m
Latvian: circenis m
Lingala: likélélé class 5 /6
Lithuanian: svirplys m
Luxembourgish: Grill f
Macedonian: штурец m ( šturec )
Malagasy: valala (mg) , ampipanga (mg)
Malayalam: ചീവീട് (ml) ( cīvīṭŭ ) , മണ്ണട്ട (ml) ( maṇṇaṭṭa )
Maltese: grillu m
Marathi: रात्रकिडा m ( rātrakiḍā )
Mi'kmaq: pugto'guome'j anim
Nahuatl: chapōlin (nah)
Navajo: nahakʼízii
Norwegian:
Bokmål: siriss m
Nynorsk: siriss m
Occitan: grilh m , grelh (oc) m
Persian: جیرجیرک (fa) ( jirjirak )
Polish: świerszcz (pl) m
Portuguese: grilo (pt) m
Punjabi: ਝੀਂਗਰ m ( jhīṅgar )
Quechua: ch'illik'utu , sirp'i
Romanian: greier (ro) m
Russian: сверчо́к (ru) m ( sverčók )
S'gaw Karen: သကံၤ ( tha keē )
Samogitian: svirplīs m
Sanskrit: फालका f ( phālakā )
Scottish Gaelic: greollan m
Serbo-Croatian:
Cyrillic: цвр́чак m , зри́кавац m
Roman: cvŕčak (sh) m , zríkavac (sh) m
Sicilian: agriḍḍu m
Slovak: svrček m
Slovene: črȋčək (sl) m anim , cvȓčək m anim
Sorbian:
Lower Sorbian: šwjerc m
Upper Sorbian: šwjerč m
Spanish: grillo (es) m
Sundanese: jangkrik
Swedish: syrsa (sv) c
Sylheti: ꠎꠤꠘꠤ ꠙꠥꠇ ( zini fuk )
Tagalog: kerwe , kuliglig-lupa
Tajik: чирчирак ( čirčirak )
Tarifit: tmurɣi f
Telugu: యిలకోడి ( yilakōḍi ) , కీచురాయి (te) ( kīcurāyi )
Thai: จิ้งหรีด (th) ( jîng-rìit )
Tigrinya: ዕንጭራር ( ʿənč̣ərar )
Turkish: cırcır böceği (tr)
Ukrainian: цвірку́н (uk) m ( cvirkún )
Urdu: جھینگر m ( jhīṅgur )
Uzbek: qora chigirtka
Vietnamese: dế (vi)
Vilamovian: gryłł f
Walloon: crikion (wa) m , tchantrê (wa) m
Waray-Waray: gangis
Welsh: criciedyn m , cricsyn m
Yiddish: גריל ( gril )
Zhuang: daekdaeq
!Xóõ: ǀɢā̰hm ǀō̰hle
Etymology 2
cricket (1)
Perhaps from a Flemish dialect of Dutch met de krik ketsen ( “ to chase a ball with a curved stick ” ) .[ 1]
Noun
cricket (uncountable )
( sports ) A game played outdoors with bats and a ball between two teams of eleven, popular in England and many Commonwealth countries.
( chiefly British , chiefly in the negative ) An act that is fair and sportsmanlike .
Antonym: not cricket
1954 , The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction , volume 7, page 81 :Robbins went on, "Henry wouldn't do anything that wasn't cricket . Me, I was raised in a river ward and I'm not bothered by niceties. [ …]
A variant of the game of darts . See Cricket (darts) .
Derived terms
Descendants
Translations
fair and sportsmanlike act
Translations to be checked
See also
Further reading
Verb
cricket (third-person singular simple present crickets , present participle cricketing , simple past and past participle cricketed )
( rare , intransitive ) To play the game of cricket .
1891 May 27, "A Cricketer in Low Circumstances", The Evening News (Sydney); cited in "What do we know about the first Test cricketer?", ESPNcricinfo , 7 August 2016
Judge: Your family is in destitute circumstances. How do you get your living?
Bannerman : By cricketing , your Worship.
Translations
Etymology 3
The etymology is unknown. A few similar words exist in Germanic languages, such as Norwegian krakk ( “ stool ” ) .[ 2]
Noun
cricket (plural crickets )
( dialectal ) A wooden footstool .
1746 , Tim Bobbin , A View of the Lancashire Dialect; by Way of Dialogue , Manchester: Josehp Harrop, pages 31 in the 6th edition 1757, 13–14 in the 1797 edition :
A relatively small area of a roof constructed to divert water from a horizontal intersection of the roof with a chimney , wall , expansion joint , or other projection .
Translations
References
Basque
Pronunciation
Noun
cricket inan
Alternative spelling of kriket
Declension
Declension of cricket (inanimate, singular only, ending in consonant)
Further reading
Dutch
Etymology
Borrowed from English cricket .
Pronunciation
IPA (key ) : /ˈkrɪ.kət/
Hyphenation: cric‧ket
Noun
cricket n (uncountable )
cricket ( sport )
Derived terms
French
Etymology
Borrowed from English cricket .
Pronunciation
Noun
cricket m (uncountable )
cricket ( sport )
Further reading
Italian
Etymology
Unadapted borrowing from English cricket .
Pronunciation
IPA (key ) : /ˈkri.ket/
Rhymes: -iket
Hyphenation: crìc‧ket
Noun
cricket m (uncountable )
cricket ( sport )
Further reading
cricket in Treccani.it – Vocabolario Treccani on line , Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana
Spanish
Noun
cricket m (uncountable )
Alternative spelling of críquet
Further reading
Swedish
Etymology
Borrowed from English cricket .
Noun
cricket c (uncountable )
cricket ( sport )
Declension
Derived terms