fork
noun
verb (used with object)
verb (used without object)
Verb Phrases
Origin of fork
OTHER WORDS FROM fork
fork·less, adjective fork·like, adjective un·fork, verb (used with object)Words nearby fork
Example sentences from the Web for fork
For an article in the Journal of Public Health and Epidemiology, the author must fork over $650 for “handling.”
In pot with boiling water, cook potatoes for 15-20 minutes or until potatoes are fork tender.
Epic Meal Empire’s Meat Monstrosities: From the Bacon Spider to the Cinnabattleship |Harley Morenstein |July 26, 2014 |DAILY BEASTOther times, if you take me out to a good restaurant, I can eat with a fork and keep my elbows off the table.
Anthony Bourdain Will ‘Try Anything Once’—but He Isn’t Calling in Sick |Lloyd Grove |April 11, 2014 |DAILY BEASTIn medium size bowl, using a fork, blend together eggs, Parmesan, salt, and pepper.
By Barbara Brody for Life by DailyBurn Sometimes the best medicine can be found at the end of a fork.
I went back into the corn, found the river, followed it back a long way and mounted into the fork of a low tree.
The Collected Works of Ambrose Bierce |Ambrose BierceLying is like Nature, you may expel her with a fork, but she will always come back again.
The Note-Books of Samuel Butler |Samuel ButlerWith five thousand infantry and one hundred and eighty cavalry he has advanced to a ford beyond the fork of Chateauguay.
Canada: the Empire of the North |Agnes C. LautHe jammed his fork into the hay and scrambled down the ladder to the barn floor.
The Duck-footed Hound |James Arthur KjelgaardEating with a fork, he thought odd, and not nearly as convenient as a knife.
Tom, The Bootblack |Horatio Alger
British Dictionary definitions for fork
noun
- a division into two or more branches
- the point where the division begins
- such a branch