Vaihtoehtoiset kirjoitusmuodot
Haettu sana löytyi näillä lähdekielillä:
| Kieli | Käännökset |
|---|
| bulgaria | щука |
| espanja | pica, lucio |
| esperanto | ezoko |
| hollanti | piek, snoek |
| italia | picca, luccio |
| japani | さんま (sanma), ほこ (hoko) |
| kreikka | δόρυ (dóry / dóri), λούτσος (loútsos), έσοξ (ésox), γουβλί (gouvlí), ζαργάνα (zargána / zarγána) |
| latina | hasta, lucius, contus |
| latvia | līdaka |
| liettua | lydeka |
| norja | pik, gjedde |
| portugali | pique, chuço, lúcio |
| puola | szczupak |
| ranska | pique, brochet, carpé |
| ruotsi | gädda, pik |
| saksa | Pike, Hecht, Spieß |
| suomi | piikki, peitsi, hauki, keihäs, seiväs |
| tanska | pike, gedde |
| tšekki | píka, štika |
| unkari | csuka |
| venäjä | пика (pika), щука (štšuka), щучий (štšutši) |
| viro | haug |
Määritelmät
Substantiivit
- A very long thrusting spear used two-handed by infantry both for attacks on enemy foot soldiers and as a counter-measure against cavalry assaults. The pike is not intended to be thrown.
- (now UK regional) A mountain peak or summit.
- A sharp point, such as that of the weapon.
- Any carnivorous freshwater fish of the genus Esox, especially the northern pike, Esox lucius.
- A turnpike.
- A pointy extrusion at the toe of a shoe, found in old-fashioned footwear.
- (diving) A dive position with knees straight and a tight bend at the hips.
- (obsolete, UK, dialect) A hayfork.
- (obsolete) A pick.
- A large haycock.
Verbit
- (transitive) To attack, prod, or injure someone with a pike.
- (Australia, New Zealand, slang, often with "on" or "out") To quit or back out of a promise.
Esimerkit
- Each had a small ax in the foreangle of his saddle, and a pike about fourteen feet long, the weapon with which he charged;
- During the earlier part of this period, the long pike disappeared from the shoe, but in the later part it returned in greater longitude than ever.
- Thus the statute of Edward the Fourth, which forbade the fine gentlemen of those times, under the degree of a lord, to wear pikes upon their shoes or boots of more than two inches in length, was a law that savoured of oppression, because, however ridiculous the fashion might appear, the restraining of it by pecuniary penalties would serve no purpose of common utility.
- She sprang into the air and jack-knifed into a clumsy pike before following her hands into the water.
- Guo and Wu took a big lead after the second dive, a back dive in pike position, which the judges awarded three perfect tens for synchronization.
- Don't pike on me like you did last time!
- —But Camus piked out, said Carole. Sartre and that lot got pissed off with him, he stood off from the war, he wouldn′t oppose it.
- Holman accepted the challenge while Norton ‘piked out’; nevertheless Holman won Cootamundra against a strong candidate.
- If they didn′t go ahead, it would look like they had piked, backed down.
- The pike of Teneriffe how high it is? 70 miles? or 50, as Patricius holds? or 9, as Snellius demonstrates in his Eratosthenes?
Taivutusmuodot
| Partisiipin perfekti | piked |
| Imperfekti | piked |
| Partisiipin preesens | piking |
| Monikko | pikes |
| Yksikön kolmannen persoonan indikatiivin preesens | pikes |