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Synonyms
hike (hīk)

[Origin unknown.]

verb: hiked, hik·ing, hikes. 

intransitive verb 

  1. To go on an extended walk for pleasure or exercise.
  2. To rise, especially to rise upward out of place: My coat had hiked up in the back.

transitive verb 

  1. To increase or raise in amount, especially abruptly: shopkeepers who hiked their prices for the tourist trade.
  2. To pull or raise with a sudden motion; hitch: hiked myself onto the stone wall; hiked up her knee socks.
  3. Football To snap (the ball).

noun 

  1. A long walk or march.
  2. An often abrupt increase or rise: a price hike.
  3. Football See snap

phrasal verbs

hike out
To sit facing the sail and lean far backward and over the side of a heeling sailboat in order to counterbalance the heel.

idioms

take a hike
To leave because one's presence is unwanted. Often used in the imperative.

derivatives

hiḱer
noun
snap (snăp)

[Probably from Middle English snappe, a quick bite, probably from Middle Low German, or Middle Dutch snappen, to seize, snap.]

verb: snapped, snap·ping, snaps. 

intransitive verb 

  1. To make a brisk sharp cracking sound: “Logs snapped in the grate” (James Fox)
  2. To break suddenly with a brisk, sharp, cracking sound.
    1. To give way abruptly under pressure or tension: With so many people crowding onto the platform, its supports snapped.
    2. To suffer a physical or mental breakdown, especially while under stress: feared that the troops would snap from fatigue.
  3. To bring the jaws briskly together, often with a clicking sound; bite.
  4. To snatch or grasp suddenly and with eagerness: snap at a chance to go to China.
  5. To speak abruptly or sharply: snapped at the child.
  6. To move swiftly and smartly: snap to attention. See synonyms at jerk1
  7. To flash or appear to flash light; sparkle: eyes that snapped with anger.
  8. To open, close, or fit together with a click: The lock snapped shut. The jacket snaps in front.

transitive verb 

  1. To snatch at with or as if with the teeth; bite.
  2. To pull apart or break with a snapping sound.
  3. To utter abruptly or sharply: The sergeant snapped out a command.
    1. To cause to emit a snapping sound: snap a whip.
    2. To close or latch with a snapping sound: snapped the purse shut.
  4. To cause to move abruptly and smartly: “His head was snapped back by a sudden scream from the bed” (James Michener)
    1. To take (a photograph).
    2. To photograph: snapped the winner on the podium.
  5. Football To center (a football); hike.

noun 

  1. A sudden sharp cracking sound or the action producing such a sound.
  2. A sudden breaking.
  3. A clasp, catch, or other fastening device that operates with a snapping sound.
  4. A sudden attempt to bite, snatch, or grasp.
    1. The sound produced by rapid movement of a finger from the thumb tip to the base of the thumb.
    2. The act of producing this sound.
  5. The sudden release of something held under pressure or tension.
  6. A thin, crisp, usually circular cookie: a ginger snap.
    1. Capacity to make a snapping sound; elasticity: This waistband has lost its snap.
    2. Informal Briskness, liveliness, or energy.
  7. A brief spell of brisk, cold weather.
  8. Something accomplished without effort. See synonyms at breeze1
    1. A snapshot.
    2. The taking of a snapshot.
  9. A snap bean.
  10. Football The passing of a football from the center to a back that initiates each play. Also called hike

adjective 

  1. Made or done suddenly, with little or no preparation: a snap decision.
  2. Fastening with a snap: snap pockets.
  3. Informal Simple; easy: a snap assignment.

adverb 

With a snap.

phrasal verbs

snap back
To recover quickly.
snap to
To pay attention or begin complying abruptly.
snap up
To acquire quickly: snapped up the tickets.

idioms

snap out of it
To move quickly back to one's normal condition from an undesirable condition, such as depression, grief, or self-pity.