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balk
[bawk]
verb (used without object)
to stop, as at an obstacle, and refuse to proceed or to do something specified (usually followed byat ).
He balked at making the speech.
(of a horse, mule, etc.) to stop short and stubbornly refuse to go on.
Baseball., to commit a balk.
verb (used with object)
to place an obstacle in the way of; hinder; thwart.
a sudden reversal that balked her hopes.
Archaic., to let slip; fail to use.
to balk an opportunity.
noun
a check or hindrance; defeat; disappointment.
a strip of land left unplowed.
a crossbeam in the roof of a house that unites and supports the rafters; tie beam.
any heavy timber used for building purposes.
Baseball., an illegal motion by a pitcher while one or more runners are on base, as a pitch in which there is either an insufficient or too long a pause after the windup or stretch, a pretended throw to first or third base or to the batter with one foot on the pitcher's rubber, etc., resulting in a penalty advancing the runner or runners one base.
Billiards., any of the eight panels or compartments lying between the cushions of the table and the balklines.
Obsolete., a miss, slip, or failure.
to make a balk.
balk
/ bɔːk, bɔːlk /
verb
to stop short, esp suddenly or unexpectedly; jib
the horse balked at the jump
to turn away abruptly; recoil
he balked at the idea of murder
(tr) to thwart, check, disappoint, or foil
he was balked in his plans
(tr) to avoid deliberately
he balked the question
(tr) to miss unintentionally
noun
a roughly squared heavy timber beam
a timber tie beam of a roof
an unploughed ridge to prevent soil erosion or mark a division on common land
an obstacle; hindrance; disappointment
baseball an illegal motion by a pitcher towards the plate or towards the base when there are runners on base, esp without delivering the ball
Other Word Forms
- balker noun
- balkingly adverb
- unbalked adjective
- unbalking adjective
- unbalkingly adverb
Word History and Origins
Origin of balk1
Word History and Origins
Origin of balk1
Idioms and Phrases
in balk, inside any of the spaces in back of the balklines on a billiard table.
Example Sentences
After some haggling — federal authorities initially balked at sending U.S. citizen minors to Mexico, Matías said — an agreement was reached.
When Swift says, for example, that industry trades said her re-recordings were “a bad idea” that “nobody would be interested in,” neither Kelce balks despite the statement being unfounded.
Speaking to Stereogum, he declined to add any fuel to the worst song of all time discussion and balked at adding a replacement pick for the single worst tune.
The thought of commodifying myself in such a blatant way, essentially putting a “for sale” sign on my identity, was enough to make me balk.
The president angered much of his base when his Department of Justice balked at releasing more information around Epstein’s case.
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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