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piking
pike 1 P0299500 (pīk)n. A long spear formerly used by infantry.tr.v. piked, pik·ing, pikes To attack or pierce with a pike. [French pique, from Old French, from piquer, to prick; see pique.] piked adj.
pike 2 P0299500 (pīk)n. pl. pike or pikes 1. A freshwater game and food fish (Esox lucius) of the Northern Hemisphere that has a long snout and attains a length of over 1.2 meters (4 feet). Also called northern pike.2. Any of various fishes closely related to this fish, such as the muskellunge or the pickerels.3. Any of various fishes that resemble this fish. [Middle English, perhaps from Old English pīc, sharp point (from its shape).]
pike 3 P0299500 (pīk)n.1. A turnpike.2. Archaic a. A tollgate on a turnpike.b. A toll paid.intr.v. piked, pik·ing, pikes To move quickly.Idiom: come down the pike Slang To come into prominence: "a policy ... allowing for little flexibility if an important new singer comes down the pike" (Christian Science Monitor). [Short for turnpike.]
pike 4 P0299500 (pīk)n. Chiefly British A hill with a pointed summit. [Middle English, possibly of Scandinavian origin.]
pike 5 P0299500 (pīk)n. A spike or sharp point, as on the tip of a spear. [Middle English, from Old English pīc.]
pike 6 P0299500 (pīk)n. A mid-air position in sports such as diving and gymnastics in which the athlete bends to touch the feet or grab the calves or back of the thighs while keeping the legs together and straight. [Probably from pike (from the resemblance of the position to the fish's head ).]piking (ˈpaɪkɪŋ) n1. (Angling) the sport of fishing for pike2. slang Brit the practice of deriving sexual pleasure from watching strangers have sex in parked cars and other secluded but public places EncyclopediaSeepike |