These are the meanings of the letters WOODRICK when you unscramble them.
- Crook (n.)
A bend, turn, or curve; curvature; flexure.
- Crook (n.)
A bishop's staff of office. Cf. Pastoral staff.
- Crook (n.)
A person given to fraudulent practices; an accomplice of thieves, forgers, etc.
- Crook (n.)
A pothook.
- Crook (n.)
A small tube, usually curved, applied to a trumpet, horn, etc., to change its pitch or key.
- Crook (n.)
An artifice; trick; tricky device; subterfuge.
- Crook (n.)
Any implement having a bent or crooked end.
- Crook (n.)
The staff used by a shepherd, the hook of which serves to hold a runaway sheep.
- Crook (n.)
To turn from a straight line; to bend; to curve.
- Crook (n.)
To turn from the path of rectitude; to pervert; to misapply; to twist.
- Crook (v. i.)
To bend; to curve; to wind; to have a curvature.
- Crowd (n.)
An ancient instrument of music with six strings; a kind of violin, being the oldest known stringed instrument played with a bow.
- Crowd (v. i.)
To press together or collect in numbers; to swarm; to throng.
- Crowd (v. i.)
To urge or press forward; to force one's self; as, a man crowds into a room.
- Crowd (v. t.)
A number of persons congregated or collected into a close body without order; a throng.
- Crowd (v. t.)
A number of things collected or closely pressed together; also, a number of things adjacent to each other.
- Crowd (v. t.)
The lower orders of people; the populace; the vulgar; the rabble; the mob.
- Crowd (v. t.)
To fill by pressing or thronging together; hence, to encumber by excess of numbers or quantity.
- Crowd (v. t.)
To play on a crowd; to fiddle.
- Crowd (v. t.)
To press by solicitation; to urge; to dun; hence, to treat discourteously or unreasonably.
- Crowd (v. t.)
To press or drive together; to mass together.
- Crowd (v. t.)
To push, to press, to shove.
- iroko (unknown)
Sorry. I don't have the meaning of this word.
- wrick (unknown)
Sorry. I don't have the meaning of this word.