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A Writer's Dictionary:

licking Definition


Dictionary Home » Words Starting with L » liberalize ... lied » licking


lick
verb licked, licking
    1. To pass the tongue over in order to moisten, taste or clean.
      Thesaurus: taste, tongue.
    2. Often said of flames: to flicker over or around.
      Thesaurus: dart, play over, touch.
    3. colloq
      To defeat.
      Thesaurus: vanquish, win, beat, overwhelm, wallop, smash, whip, thrash, beat, subdue, conquer.
    4. colloq
      To beat or hit repeatedly.
noun
    1. An act of licking with the tongue.
    2. colloq
      A small amount.
    3. colloq
      A quick speed.
      Example: drove away at some lick
    4. colloq
      A sharp blow.
Idiom: a lick and a promise
    colloq
    A short and not very thorough wash.
Idiom: lick into shape
    colloq
    To make more efficient or satisfactory.
Idiom: lick one's lips (lick one's chops)
    colloq
    To look forward to something with relish.
Idiom: lick one's wounds
    To recover after having been thoroughly defeated or humiliated.
Idiom: lick the dust
    To die.
Etymology: Anglo-Saxon liccian.





licking
noun
    1. colloq
      A thrashing, both physical and figurative.
      Thesaurus: whipping, beating, spanking, thrashing, trouncing, defeat.
Idiom: get a licking (take a licking)
    To be thrashed.
      Example: got a licking from his mum for being late
      Example: took a licking in the chess championship
Idiom: give someone a licking
    To thrash them.


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