Resembling a fork; divided or separated into two branches.
Sinônimos
Examples for "forked"
Examples for "forked"
1Flash succeeds flash; the lightning in forked streaks darting through the air.
2The forked tongue, lightning-like, ran in and out upon the copper skin.
3A little further and the road forked-themain one followed the shore.
4He had hunted in the mountains while forked lightning flashed around him.
5The road forked, and the guards guided the elves to the left.
1But things did change as Norah Jones branched out into the new.
2From this branched three roads leading to the villages in the plain.
3And so they've branched into building self-driving cars and a life-sciences company.
4The seven-branched candlesticks in black-wood, silver mounted, are by the same architect.
5And here the conversation branched off on the all-absorbing topic of dress.
1Of course there would be more patrols, given that night's two-pronged attack.
2In fact, All Day would make a great twin-pronged Christmas party soundtrack.
3The three-pronged sceptre or trident of Poseidon reappears constantly in ancient history.
4The two-pronged message of economic rebalancing and nationalism is a potent one.
5Then he made a three-pronged fork and gave it to the prince.
1The leaves continually bifurcate, so that a full-grown one terminates in from twenty to thirty
2The marginal spine next above the pedunculated operculum, bifurcate.
3On Tuesday the federal government postponed a decision to bifurcate the southern state following protests by political parties.
4Every few centimeters the crawling lines would bifurcate; a few centimeters more they would divide again to build hexagons.
5We will examine the spectra of asymmetric solutions near the point at which they bifurcate off of a symmetric branch.
1Drawing of Marrella from Gould, 1989c, to show homonomy of nearly identical biramous appendages on all postoral segments.
2These biramous appendages were multifunctional, with one branch used for feeding and walking, and the other branch for breathing.
1The first that the polecat knew of him was that red-hot fork-like feeling that means fangs in the back of your neck.
2The devil and his fire, his long forked-like iron bar scared the living daylights out of thousands of small children.