piked

  • 31PIK loan — A PIK Loan is a type of loan which typically does not provide for any cash flows from borrower to lender between the drawdown date and the maturity or refinancing date, not even interest or parts thereof (see mezzanine loan), thus making it an… …

    Wikipedia

  • 32Blanik (vault) — Blanik is the name of a techique in vault in artistic gymnastics, a double front handspring vault in piked position in, followed by a double back Tsukahara. The piked performance of the technique has rating 10.0 in the Code of Points. The vault… …

    Wikipedia

  • 33pike — pike1 pikelike, adj. /puyk/, n., pl. (esp. collectively) pike, (esp. referring to two or more kinds or species) pikes. 1. any of several large, slender, voracious freshwater fishes of the genus Esox, having a long, flat snout: the blue pike of… …

    Universalium

  • 34pykfork — pykfork, pykid, pyking, pykit obs. ff. pickfork, piked, picking, picked, piked …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 35pykid — pykfork, pykid, pyking, pykit obs. ff. pickfork, piked, picking, picked, piked …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 36pyking — pykfork, pykid, pyking, pykit obs. ff. pickfork, piked, picking, picked, piked …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 37pykit — pykfork, pykid, pyking, pykit obs. ff. pickfork, piked, picking, picked, piked …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 38Balaenoptera rostrata — Pike Pike, n. [F. pique; perhaps of Celtic origin; cf. W. pig a prick, a point, beak, Arm. pik pick. But cf. also L. picus woodpecker (see {Pie} magpie), and E. spike. Cf. {Pick}, n. & v., {Peak}, {Pique}.] 1. (Mil.) A foot soldier s weapon,… …

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • 39Crook — Crook, v. i. To bend; to curve; to wind; to have a curvature. The port . . . crooketh like a bow. Phaer. [1913 Webster] Their shoes and pattens are snouted, and piked more than a finger long, crooking upwards. Camden. [1913 Webster] …

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • 40Dutch hoe — Hoe Hoe, n. [OF. hoe, F. houe; of German origin, cf. OHG. houwa, howa, G. haue, fr. OHG. houwan to hew. See {Hew} to cut.] 1. A tool chiefly for digging up weeds, and arranging the earth about plants in fields and gardens. It is made of a flat… …

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English