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Definition of pike noun from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

pike

noun
 
/paɪk/
 
/paɪk/
Idioms
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  1. (plural pike)
    a large freshwater fish with very sharp teethTopics Fish and shellfishc2
  2. a weapon with a sharp blade (= metal cutting edge) on a long wooden handle, used in the past by soldiers on foot
  3. (also turnpike)
    (North American English) a wide road, where traffic can travel fast for long distances and that drivers must pay a toll to use
  4. (dialect) a pointed top of a hill in the north of England
    • the Langdale Pikes
  5. Word Originsense 1 Middle English: from pike ‘weapon’ (because of the fish's pointed jaw).sense 2 and sense 4 early 16th cent.: from French pique, back-formation from piquer ‘pierce’, from pic ‘pick, pike’; compare with Old English pīc ‘point, prick’ (of unknown origin). Sense (4) is apparently of Scandinavian origin; compare with West Norwegian dialect pīk ‘pointed mountain’.
Idioms
come down the pike
  1. (North American English, informal) to happen; to become easy to notice
    • We're hearing a lot about new inventions coming down the pike.
See pike in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary
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