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Definitions

crick

[krik] / krɪk /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

See Examples For:

They may end up with more than a crick in their neck.

From MarketWatch Apr. 3, 2026

It had been a stunning first half, a six-try epic that gave you a crick in your neck such was the flow from one end to the other.

From BBC Jul. 26, 2025

Various courts have since let us know that nope, 'twas merely a small crick against the doomsday direction in which we were previously heading.

From Salon Aug. 6, 2021

I may have a permanent crick in my neck from lugging a substantial dog basket home from outside a mansion in Primrose Hill.

From The New Yorker Nov. 12, 2018

He was out of that crick like he could walk on water.

From "The Teacher’s Funeral" by Richard Peck

The lobby occupies the old Terminal Station, a beaux-arts structure that was built in 1909 and causes neck cricks with its 82-foot-high ceiling dome.

From Washington Post Sep. 20, 2017

We used to put fish nets in the rivers and cricks and get maybe 2,500 to 4,500 salmon, just to feed our teams.

From Time Magazine Archive

No one knows that better than the purveyors of products designed to ease or ward off cricks in the lower back.

From Time Magazine Archive

Nephew Shawn does a knee bend and cricks his neck from side to side, like he’s done this a billion times.

From "Better Nate Than Ever" by Tim Federle

As the swing cricked a hundred cricks, Cat thought about the summer and all the disappointments and surprises it had brought her.

From "Caterpillar Summer" by Gillian McDunn

One of them, in a wee tartan skirt, strikes cricked and awkward poses, then gets it in the neck, mouthing the word “fashion” at the last gasp.

From The New Yorker Jun. 14, 2019

I remember reading the fourth in the playground with my friend, both of us reading separate pages with our necks cricked.

From The Guardian Jun. 24, 2017

The heads are disproportionately big, the hands claw-like, the limbs flaccid or cricked and skewed in defiance of anatomy to get across further expression or character.

From The Guardian Jul. 10, 2010

If you are worried about getting a cricked neck, take a pillow case and stuff it with clothes at night.

From The Guardian Jun. 21, 2010

They sat in the porch swing, which cricked over the sound of the waves.

From "Caterpillar Summer" by Gillian McDunn

He listened and heard only the cricking heat and the hiss of distance.

From "The Pearl" by John Steinbeck

Caul stood cricking his neck from side to side and stretching his arms boredly.

From "Hollow City" by Ransom Riggs

The porch swing cricked five hundred times before Cat crawled under the covers next to her brother, and it was still cricking when she closed her eyes and fell asleep.

From "Caterpillar Summer" by Gillian McDunn

When they get home, they yawning, crickets is cricking.

From "The Help" by Kathryn Stockett

And there in the face of day O'Hara sat on the thwart, tugging like mad, now cricking his neck almost to stare up at the cliff, and now grinning down at me in silly triumph.

From The White Wolf and Other Fireside Tales by Quiller-Couch, Arthur Thomas, Sir




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