wick|et

wick|et
wick|et «WIHK iht», noun.
1. a small door or gate: »

The big door has a wicket in it.

2. a small window or opening, usually having a grate or grill over it: »

Buy your tickets at this wicket.

3. a wire arch stuck in the ground in the game of croquet for the ball to be knocked through; hoop.
4. a) either of the two sets of sticks at which the ball is bowled in cricket. They are placed at opposite ends of the playing pitch. Each wicket consists of three uprights (stumps) across which two small sticks (bails) are laid in grooves. The bowler's object is to strike the stumps, the batsman's to prevent thall from hitting them. b) the level space between these, especially with reference to its condition for bowling: »

a fast wicket.

c) the turn of a batsman. d) the period during which two men bat together. e) an incomplete (or unopened) inning for any batsman.
5. a small gate or valve for emptying the chamber of a canal lock, or in the chute of a water wheel for regulating the passage of water.
6. an entrance turnstile.
[< Anglo-French wiket, perhaps ultimately < Scandinavian (compare Old Icelandic vīkja a move)]

Useful english dictionary. 2012.

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