fluke
Kelime Anlamı :

1. şans eseri.
2. beklenmedik başarı.
3. rastlantı.
4. şans.
5. balina kuyruğu.
6. tırnak.
7. demir tırnağı.
8. dilbalığı.
9. şerit.
10. uç (mızrak/ok vb).
Eş Anlamlı Kelimeler :
Tanımlar :
1. in whaling: to disable the flukes of, as a whale, by spading.
2. to fasten, as a whale, by means of a chain or rope.
3. in whaling, to use the flukes, as a fish or cetacean: often with an indefinite it.
4. to gain an advantage over a competitor or opponent by accident or chance; especially, to make a scratch in billiards. see fluke, n., 5.
5. in shooting, to hit by a chance shot.
6. the part of an anchor which catches in the ground. see anchor.
7. one of the barbs of a harpoon or toggle-iron; a flue: called by english whalemen wither.
8. either half of the tail of a cetacean or sirenian: so called from its resemblance to the fluke of an anchor.
9. in mining, an instrument used to clean a hole previous to charging it with powder for blasting.
10. [⟨ fluke, verb] in billiards, an accidentally successful stroke; the advantage gained when, playing for one thing, one gets another; hence, any unexpected or accidental advantage or turn; a chance; a scratch.
11. henceto become refractory or mutinous; make a disturbance on board ship.
12. henceto go to bed; bunk or turn in.
13. A name given locally in great britain to species of flatfish.
14. A trematoid worm; an entozoic parasitic worm of the order Trematoidea, infesting various parts of man and other animals, especially the liver, bile-ducts, etc.: so called from the resemblance of its hydatid to a fluke or flounder.
15. waste cotton.
16. A lock of hair.
17. A result of accident or lucky chance rather than of skill.
18. A failure, as of a yacht-race for lack of wind.
from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia
1. a stroke of luck
2. a barb on a harpoon or arrow
3. either of the two lobes of the tail of a cetacean
4. flat bladelike projection on the arm of an anchor
5. parasitic flatworms having external suckers for attaching to a host
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.