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Spike   /spaɪk/   Listen
Spike

noun
1.
A transient variation in voltage or current.
2.
Sports equipment consisting of a sharp point on the sole of a shoe worn by athletes.
3.
Fruiting spike of a cereal plant especially corn.  Synonyms: capitulum, ear.
4.
(botany) an indeterminate inflorescence bearing sessile flowers on an unbranched axis.
5.
A sharp rise followed by a sharp decline.
6.
A very high narrow heel on women's shoes.  Synonyms: spike heel, stiletto heel.
7.
Each of the sharp points on the soles of athletic shoes to prevent slipping (or the shoes themselves).  "Golfers' spikes damage the putting greens"
8.
A sharp-pointed projection along the top of a fence or wall (or a dinosaur).
9.
A long, thin sharp-pointed implement (wood or metal).
10.
Any holding device consisting of a rigid, sharp-pointed object.  Synonym: spindle.
11.
A large stout nail.
verb
(past & past part. spiked; pres. part. spiking)
1.
Stand in the way of.
2.
Pierce with a sharp stake or point.  Synonyms: empale, impale, transfix.
3.
Secure with spikes.
4.
Bring forth a spike or spikes.  Synonym: spike out.
5.
Add alcohol to (beverages).  Synonyms: fortify, lace.
6.
Manifest a sharp increase.



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"Spike" Quotes from Famous Books



... spook," Patsy began, "I got the fearfulest thump on my crust that I've had since that marline-spike fell off the main yard on to me in the little affair of the Five ...
— The Crime of the French Cafe and Other Stories • Nicholas Carter

... looking as dark and wicked as he had done that night when he had thrilled Tim's heart by his shocking conduct. The boy drew slowly near, half fearful of his own daring. What if the dark man should not at first recognize him as a kindred spirit, and should leap at him with a hand-spike? John McIntyre ...
— Treasure Valley • Marian Keith

... marine technicalities Mr. RUSSELL introduces into his stories without explanations such as this, it would be difficult to say. But with such assistance, a studding-sail-boom becomes as easy of identification as a marling-spike lashed to a forecastle spinaker-boom, close hauled aport under trysails, blowing out like flags from the grips of clew-lines and leech-lines towards the close of a second dog-watch! Shiver LINDLEY MURRAY'S timbers! but what can be finer than a bulkhead battened down ...
— Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 98, March 1, 1890 • Various

... the charge shatters them. Horse and foot, carbines and petronels, swords and pole-axes, are mingled in one struggling mass. Rupert and his men seem refreshed, not exhausted, by the weary night,—they seem incapable of fatigue; they spike the guns as they cut down the gunners, and, if any escape, it is because many in both armies wear the same red scarfs. One Puritan, surrounded by the enemy, shows such desperate daring that Rupert bids release him at last, and sends afterwards to Essex to ask his ...
— Atlantic Monthly, Volume 3, No. 20, June, 1859 • Various

... blindly in a voyage to worlds unknown, for profits guessed at, against dangers neither to be counted nor foreseen. Be not too much stricken of amazement, therefore, when now these cold ones, who would not have bought an American railroad without counting the cross-ties and weighing every spike and fish-plate, were ready to send millions adrift on a sightless invasion of Asia ten thousand miles away. Besides, as the five with Mr. Harley laid out their campaign, any question of Oriental danger was for the present ...
— The President - A novel • Alfred Henry Lewis


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