Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Tricke.
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Awe-stricken
Awe-stricken Awe"-strick`en, a.
Awe-struck.
Heartstricken
Heartstricken Heart"strick`en, a.
Shocked; dismayed.
Panic-stricken
Panic-stricken Pan"ic-strick`en, Panic-struck
Pan"ic-struck`, a.
Struck with a panic, or sudden fear. --Burke.
Planet-stricken
Planet-stricken Plan"et-strick`en, Planet-struck
Plan"et-struck`, a.
Affected by the influence of planets; blasted. --Milton.
Like planet-stricken men of yore He trembles, smitten
to the core By strong compunction and remorse.
--Wordsworth.
StrickenStricken Strick"en, p. p. & a. from Strike.
1. Struck; smitten; wounded; as, the stricken deer.
Note: [See Strike, n.]
2. Worn out; far gone; advanced. See Strike, v. t., 21.
Abraham was old and well stricken in age. --Gen.
xxiv. 1.
3. Whole; entire; -- said of the hour as marked by the
striking of a clock. [Scot.]
He persevered for a stricken hour in such a torrent
of unnecessary tattle. --Sir W.
Scott.
Speeches are spoken by the stricken hour, day after
day, week, perhaps, after week. --Bayne. TrickedTrick Trick, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Tricked; p. pr. & vb. n.
Tricking.]
1. To deceive by cunning or artifice; to impose on; to
defraud; to cheat; as, to trick another in the sale of a
horse.
2. To dress; to decorate; to set off; to adorn fantastically;
-- often followed by up, off, or out. `` Trick her off in
air.' --Pope.
People lavish it profusely in tricking up their
children in fine clothes, and yet starve their
minds. --Locke.
They are simple, but majestic, records of the
feelings of the poet; as little tricked out for the
public eye as his diary would have been. --Macaulay.
3. To draw in outline, as with a pen; to delineate or
distinguish without color, as arms, etc., in heraldry.
They forget that they are in the statutes: . . .
there they are tricked, they and their pedigrees.
--B. Jonson. Tricker
Tricker Trick"er, n.
One who tricks; a trickster.
Tricker
Tricker Trick"er, n.
A trigger. [Obs. or Prov. Eng.] --Boyle.
Trickery
Trickery Trick"er*y, n.
The art of dressing up; artifice; stratagem; fraud;
imposture.
Meaning of Tricke from wikipedia
- nor the
first Tricke,
without the
consent of both parties. The
partie that
asketh a carde, may not vie any carde,
before the
first tricke be pla****. You...
- forward, a
trauerse of six round: do this twice,
three singles side,
galliard tricke of twentie,
curranto pace; a
figure of eight,
three singles broken downe...
- was good; but for the
stincking Well
quoth Sir
Henry Poole it was a bold
tricke To **** in the nose of the
bodie politique In 1624
Ludlow succeeded to the...
- a Cornishman, and a good wrastler,
shewed his
companion such a
Cornishe tricke, that he made his
sides ake
against the
grounde for a
moneth after." (The...
-
epigrams on
moral subjects.
There are some
jesting verses entitled 'A
perfect tricke to kill
little blacke flees in one's chamber.' Only one copy of the volume...
- S. Brewer, 2007. W. J. Olive, "Shakespeare
Parody in Davenport's A New
Tricke to
Cheat the Divell,"
Modern Language Notes Vol. 66 (1951), pp. 478–80....