释义 |
fluke I. \ˈflük\ noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English fluke, floke, from Old English flōc; akin to Old Norse flōki flounder, Old High German flah smooth — more at flake 1. : flatfish; especially : summer flounder 2. : a flattened, leaf-shaped or lanceolate digenetic trematode worm; sometimes : trematode — see liver fluke II. noun (-s) Etymology: perhaps from fluke (I); from the flat shape, resembling a flounder 1. : the part of an anchor that fastens in the ground; especially : the broad end of each arm — see anchor illustration 2. : something shaped like the broad end of the arm of an anchor: as a. : the barbed head or one of the barbs of a harpoon, whaling lance, arrow, or similar weapon b. : one of the lobes of a whale's tail c. : an instrument used to clean a hole in rock preparatory to blasting III. transitive verb (-ed/-ing/-s) : to make (a dead whale) fast by the tail (as for removing and processing blubber) IV. noun (-s) Etymology: origin unknown 1. : an accidentally successful stroke at billiards or pool 2. : an accidental advantage or result of an action : an extraordinary stroke of good or bad luck < he won by a fluke > < such a fall was a pure fluke > V. verb (-ed/-ing/-s) transitive verb : to get, make, do, or succeed in by chance or accident intransitive verb : to succeed or fail by chance |