related to Old Norse kriki (“bend; nook”), whence also <span class="searchmatch">crick</span> (“creek”) and creek. <span class="searchmatch">crick</span> (plural <span class="searchmatch">cricks</span>) A painful muscular cramp or spasm of some part of...
<span class="searchmatch">cricking</span> present participle and gerund of <span class="searchmatch">crick</span>...
<span class="searchmatch">cricked</span> simple past and past participle of <span class="searchmatch">crick</span>...
See also: <span class="searchmatch">crick</span> Rhymes: -ɪk English Wikipedia has an article on: <span class="searchmatch">Crick</span> Wikipedia <span class="searchmatch">Crick</span> A village and civil parish in Daventry district, Northamptonshire...
From un- + <span class="searchmatch">crick</span>. uncrick (third-person singular simple present uncricks, present participle uncricking, simple past and past participle uncricked) (transitive)...
i/ Rhymes: -ɪki From <span class="searchmatch">crick</span> + -y. cricky (comparative more cricky, superlative most cricky) Resembling or characteristic of a <span class="searchmatch">crick</span>. a cricky feeling in...
kriki (“bend; nook”). IPA(key): /ˈkrik(ə)/ crykke (plural crykkes) <span class="searchmatch">crick</span> English: <span class="searchmatch">crick</span> “crike, n.(2)”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan...
door Rosalind Franklin, die gelijktijdig met James D. Watson en Francis <span class="searchmatch">Crick</span> aan het onderzoek werkte. — The chemical structure of DNA, a double helix...
Grick From English creek or <span class="searchmatch">crick</span>. Krick f (plural Kricke) creek 1907, “Das Schulhaus an der Krick”, in The Pennsylvania-German: A Popular Magazine, page...