cricket

See also: Cricket

English

WOTD – 16 May 2008
cricket on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

Pronunciation

  • (UK, US) IPA(key): /ˈkɹɪk.ɪt/
  • (file)
  • (file)
  • Rhymes: -ɪkɪt

Etymology 1

From Middle English creket, crykett, crykette, from Old French crequet, criquet (with diminutive -et) from criquer (to make a cracking sound; creak), from Middle Dutch kricken (to creak; crack), related to Middle English creken (to creak). Compare Middle Dutch krikel, criekel, crekel (cricket) (with diminituve -el), Middle Low German krikel, krekel (cricket), German Kreckel (cricket). More at creak.

Noun

cricket (plural crickets)

  1. An insect in the order Orthoptera, especially family Gryllidae, that makes a chirping sound by rubbing its wing casings against combs on its hind legs.
    1. (US, slang, humorous, in the plural) In the form crickets: absolute silence; no communication.
  2. A wooden footstool.
  3. A signalling device used by soldiers in hostile territory to identify themselves to a friendly in low visibility conditions.
  4. A relatively small area of a roof constructed to divert water from a horizontal intersection of the roof with a chimney, wall, expansion joint or other projection.
Derived terms
Translations

Etymology 2

cricket (1)

Perhaps from a Flemish dialect of Dutch met de krik ketsen (to chase a ball with a curved stick)[1].

Noun

cricket (uncountable)

  1. (sports) A game played outdoors with bats and a ball between two teams of eleven, popular in England and many Commonwealth countries.
  2. (chiefly Britain) An act that is fair and sportsmanlike, derived from the sport.
    Synonyms: not cricket, unsportsmanlike
    That player's foul wasn't cricket!
Usage notes

The sense "An act that is fair and sportsmanlike" is always used in negative constructions (not cricket) and is not restricted to sports usage.

Translations
The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables, removing any numbers. Numbers do not necessarily match those in definitions. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout#Translations.
See also
  • Appendix:Glossary of cricket

Verb

cricket (third-person singular simple present crickets, present participle cricketing, simple past and past participle cricketed)

  1. (rare, intransitive) To play the game of cricket.
    • 1891 May 27, "A Cricketer in Low Circumstances", The Evening News (Sydney); cited in "What do we know about the first Test cricketer?", ESPNcricinfo, 7 August 2016
      Judge: Your family is in destitute circumstances. How do you get your living?
      Bannerman: By cricketing, your Worship.
Translations

References

  1. Chris Mason (March 2, 2009), “Cricket 'was invented in Belgium'”, in BBC News

Dutch

Etymology

Borrowed from English cricket.

Pronunciation

  • (file)
  • Hyphenation: cric‧ket

Noun

cricket n (uncountable)

  1. cricket (sport)

French

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /kʁi.kɛt/

Noun

cricket m (uncountable)

  1. cricket (sport)

Further reading


Italian

Noun

cricket m

  1. cricket (sport)

Spanish

Noun

cricket m (uncountable)

  1. cricket (sport)

Swedish

Alternative forms

  • kricket (less common)

Noun

cricket c (uncountable)

  1. cricket (sport)

Declension

Declension of cricket 
Uncountable
Indefinite Definite
Nominative cricket cricketen
Genitive crickets cricketens

Derived terms

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