crock

[US]/krɒk/
[UK]/krɑk/
Frequency: Very High

Translation

n. a clay pot; broken pieces of pottery
vt. to weaken; to make someone's body collapse
vi. to become weak; to have one's body collapse
Word Forms
Past Participlecrocked
Present Participlecrocking
Third Person Singularcrocks
Pluralcrocks
Past Tensecrocked

Phrases & Collocations

crock of nonsense

crockpot cooking

crockery and cutlery

Example Sentences

he crocked a shoulder in the test against South Africa.

Extruded feed for marine fish: Turbot, flounder, salmon, tuna, sea-bream, swellfish, yellow crock, sea bass, rockfish, red drum, etc.

That story is a crock of lies.

She called the politician's speech a crock of nonsense.

I can't believe he fell for such a crock.

The company's excuse was a crock.

Don't listen to that crock of advice.

The so-called miracle cure turned out to be a crock.

His explanation was a crock of excuses.

The article was a crock of misinformation.

She dismissed his theory as a crock of nonsense.

The book turned out to be a crock of clichés.

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