Cock

ahd-5
  • noun. A cone-shaped pile of straw or hay.
  • transitive verb. To arrange (straw or hay) into piles shaped like cones.
  • noun. undefined
  • noun. An adult male chicken; a rooster.
  • noun. An adult male of various other birds.
  • noun. A weathervane shaped like a rooster; a weathercock.
  • noun. A faucet or valve by which the flow of a liquid or gas can be regulated.
  • noun. undefined
  • noun. The hammer of a firearm.
  • noun. The position of the hammer of a firearm when ready for firing.
  • noun. A tilting or jaunty turn upward.
  • noun. undefined
  • noun. The penis.
  • noun. A man or boy regarded as mean or contemptible.
  • noun. The characteristic cry of a rooster early in the morning.
  • transitive verb. To set the hammer of (a firearm) in a position ready for firing.
  • transitive verb. To set (a device, such as a camera shutter) in a position ready for use.
  • transitive verb. To tilt or turn up or to one side, usually in a jaunty or alert manner.
  • transitive verb. To raise in preparation to throw or hit.
  • idiom. (cock of the walk) An overbearing or domineering person.
  • The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia
  • noun. A small conical pile of hay, so shaped for shedding rain; a haycock.
  • The act of turning up or to one side in a jaunty or significant way, as the head or a hat; the position of anything thus placed.
  • A particular shape given to a hat, especially by turning up and fastening the brim.
  • One of the flaps or parts of a hat turned up. See flap.
  • noun. A nock or notch, especially that in the butt-end of an arrow, or on the stock of a crossbow, which receives or retains the string.
  • To fight; contend.
  • To turn up or to one side in a jaunty or significant way; give a pert, knowing, or inquiring turn to: as, to cock the head; to cock the eye at a person; to cock the brim of a hat; the horse cocked up his ears.
  • To hold up the head; look big, pert, or domineering.
  • noun. A cockle.
  • noun. Scarlet.
  • noun. The male of the domestic fowl; specifically, a male chicken one year old or older, one less than a year old being properly called a cockerel.
  • noun. The male of any other bird, particularly of the gallinaceous kind: in this use especially in composition, as in peacock, turkey-cock, cockrobin, cock-sparrow, etc.
  • noun. A bird, particularly a gallinaceous bird, without reference to sex: usually in composition or with a distinctive epithet or qualifying phrase, as in blackcock, logcock, woodcock, and the phrasal names below.
  • noun. Cock-crowing; the time when cocks crow in the morning.
  • noun. A leader; a chief person; a ruling spirit: as, cock of the school.
  • noun. A fellow; chap: a familiar term of address or appellation, usually preceded by old, and used much in the same way as fellow, chap, boy, etc.
  • noun. A vane in the shape of a cock; a weather-cock.
  • noun. A faucet or turn-valve, contrived for the purpose of permitting or arresting the flow of fluids or air through a pipe, usually taking its special name from its peculiar use or construction: as, air-cock, feed-cock, gage-cock, etc.
  • noun. The portion of the lock of a firearm which by its fall, when released through the action of the trigger, produces the discharge; in a flint-lock, the part that holds the flint; in a percussion-lock, the hammer.
  • noun. In a firearm, the position into which the hammer is brought by being pulled back to the first or second catch. See at full cock, at half cock, below.
  • noun. The style or gnomon of a dial.
  • noun. The needle of a balance.
  • noun. The piece which forms the bearing of the balance in a clock or watch.
  • noun. Same as cockee.
  • noun. A fictitious narrative, in verse or prose, sold in the streets as a true account; a cock-and-bull story; a canard.
  • noun. Fight.
  • In hay-making, to put into cocks or piles.
  • noun. A small boat; a cockboat; a skiff.
  • To pamper; cocker.
  • noun. A perversion of or substitution for the word God, occurring in oaths, such as “(By) cock's body” (bones, wounds, nouns, etc.), “by cock and pye,” etc. Compare gog in similar use.
  • Word Usage
    "And the word cock is a halfway dirty word; fifty percent dirty, dirty half the time, depending on what you mean by it."
    cross-reference
    Equivalent
    Form
    has_topic
    Erotica  
    Hypernym
    Words that are more generic or abstract
    cant  cant over  faucet  lay  member  
    Rhyme
    Words with the same terminal sound
    Bach  Bangkok  Bloch  Block  Brock  
    Same Context
    Words that are found in similar contexts
    Dick  ass  bird  eagle  fowl  
    Synonym
    Words with the same meaning
    verb-form
    cocked  cocking  cocks