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Crick
(redirected from cricking)

   Also found in: Medical, Idioms, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.01 sec.
Crick  (krk), Francis Henry Compton 1916-2004.
British biologist who with James D. Watson proposed a spiral model, the double helix, for the molecular structure of DNA. He shared a 1962 Nobel Prize for advances in the study of genetics.

crick 1  (krk)
n.
A painful cramp or muscle spasm, as in the back or neck.
tr.v. cricked, crick·ing, cricks
To cause a painful cramp or muscle spasm in by turning or wrenching.

[Middle English crike.]

crick 2  (krk)
n. Upper Northern & Western U.S.
Variant of creek. See Regional Note at run.

Crick [krɪk]
n
(Biographies / Crick, Francis Harry Compton (1916 M, English, SCIENCE: biologist) Francis Harry Compton. born 1916, English molecular biologist: helped to discover the helical structure of DNA; Nobel prize for physiology or medicine shared with James Watson and Maurice Wilkins 1962

crick1 Informal
n
(Life Sciences & Allied Applications / Physiology) a painful muscle spasm or cramp, esp in the neck or back
vb
(Life Sciences & Allied Applications / Physiology) (tr) to cause a crick in (the neck, back, etc.)
[of uncertain origin]

crick2
n
(Earth Sciences / Physical Geography) US and Canadian a dialect word for creek [2]
ThesaurusLegend:  Synonyms Related Words Antonyms
Noun1.crick - a painful muscle spasm especially in the neck or back (`rick' and `wrick' are British)
Britain, Great Britain, U.K., UK, United Kingdom, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland - a monarchy in northwestern Europe occupying most of the British Isles; divided into England and Scotland and Wales and Northern Ireland; `Great Britain' is often used loosely to refer to the United Kingdom
cramp, muscle spasm, spasm - a painful and involuntary muscular contraction
2.Crick - English biochemist who (with Watson in 1953) helped discover the helical structure of DNA (1916-2004)
Verb1.crick - twist (a body part) into a strained position; "crick your neck"
twist - turn in the opposite direction; "twist one's head"

crick (Informal)
noun
spasm, cramp, convulsion, twinge I've got a crick in my neck from looking up at the screen.
verb
rick, jar, wrench I cricked my back from sitting in the same position for too long.
Translations
crick [krɪk]
A. N to have a crick in one's neck/backtener tortícolis/lumbago
B. VT to crick one's necktener tortícolis
to crick one's backtener un ataque de lumbago
crick [ˈkrɪk] n (in back)tour m de reins
to have a crick in one's neck → avoir un torticolis
crick
n a crick in one’s neck/backein steifes Genick/ein steifer Rücken
vt to crick one’s neck/backsich (dat)ein steifes Genick/einen steifen Rücken zuziehen
crick [krɪk]
1. n crick in the necktorcicollo
crick in the back → dolore m alla schiena
2. vt to crick one's neckprendere il torcicollo
to crick one's back → farsi male alla schiena


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Back with their families, the players have been venting their anguish over the killings, though there has been casualties from cricking circles.
Murray screamed in agony when he fell at the start of third set, straining his groin and cricking his neck but it's the thumb injury he sustained at the end of the first set that worries him most.
Still, she'd managed to pin the ruined examples of yesterday's fabrics to the board beside her desk where we might consider them from our slightly sublimated position, cricking our necks just so and in this act being reminded our of dazzling ineptitude.
 
 
 
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