Siked vs Piked - What's the difference?
siked | piked |
(sike)
A gutter or ditch; a small stream that frequently dries up in the summer.
(archaic) To sigh or sob.
(slang) Indicating that one's preceding statement was false and that one has successfully fooled ("psyched out") one's interlocutor.
Furnished with a pike; ending in a point; peaked; pointed
Describing a dive in which the knees are kept straight, but the body is bent at a right-angle at the hips
(pike)
As verbs the difference between siked and piked
is that siked is (sike) while piked is (pike).As an adjective piked is
furnished with a pike; ending in a point; peaked; pointed.siked
English
Verb
(head)Anagrams
* *sike
English
Alternative forms
* sykeEtymology 1
From the northern form of (etyl) (see (sitch)), from (etyl). Cognate with Norwegian sik. Compare (m).Noun
(en noun)- The wind made wave the red weed on the dike. bedoven in dank deep was every sike . — A Scotch Winter Evening in 1512