A painful muscle spasm especially in the neck or back (`rick' and `wrick' are British)
Twist suddenly so as to sprain.
Sinônimos
Examples for "rick"
Examples for "rick"
1She led the way to the rick-yard, and round towards the sunrise.
2The rick came down and the ridge-pole caught him across the back.
3The mother-wolf hissed with agonized fury on the roof of the rick.
4Rick Snyder could have allowed this public health disaster to ever happen.
5The second time it's happening, someone's life got taken, Rick Kelly said.
1We love every kink, nap, and curl just the way they are.
2I reckon things have got in a sort of kink for you.
3Soon it would smash into the kink that rose to meet them.
4You got a kink in you when you were quite a girl.
5In fact, those who live a kink lifestyle scorn this problematic novel.
1For the moment I suffered from a nasty crick in the conscience.
2At last I became conscious of an intolerable crick in my neck.
3Why, I have one universal crick wherever I used to have muscles.
4It was as if I'd developed a permanent crick in my back.
5You can't see anything-exceptthe woods and the 'crick' and the mountains.
1How many men would have had the courage to wrick their foot as he had done?
2Prosecutors there accuse the agencies of publishing incorrect reports and of at least one leak during market hours, wrick knocked shares.