Similar words: spike, spikelet, pike, turnpike, pikestaff, spiky, disliked, feel like doing. Meaning: [spaɪk] adj. 1. equipped with long sharp-pointed projections especially along the top of a wall or fence 2. having a long sharp point.
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(91) In November, the Earth Liberation Front (ELF), an underground organization, gave warning that it had"spiked"trees in the Nez Perce national forest to protest against logging.
(92) Virginia Miller, a spokeswoman for the group, noted that fuel prices spiked in the spring of 2006 and public transit ridership rose. By the end of the summer prices declined, but ridership had not.
(93) The player on second base was spiked by the runner on base.
(94) This isn't the first time library attendance has spiked in a downturn.
(95) An astral dreadnought is as large as a strom giant, covered from head to tail in layers of thick, spiked plates.
(96) For example, the word "tsunami" spiked in 2004 and 2011 following the Indian Ocean and Japanese events, as did the equivalent word in Spanish, maremoto, suggesting that they mean the same thing.
(97) You spiked the ball and put us in the lead.
(98) Fear spiked my gut as I scrambled back down onto the battlement, and in a fury I went to kick the sleeping sentries awake.
(98) Sentencedict.com is a online sentence dictionary, on which you can find good sentences for a large number of words.
(99) Every weapon also comes equipped with razor-sharp blades for hand-to-hand combat and a spiked, riveted, fanged metal esthetic is used on all military equipment.
(100) On day 30, his temperature spiked to 39 deg C.
(101) The U.S. personal saving rate, barely positive in recent years, spiked to a 13-year high of 5 percent in May as debt-strapped consumers held onto a large share of the windfall.
(102) Actually , the colleague has not spiked a rumour but actually the necessity.
(103) A spiked or perforated device used to support stems in a flower arrangement.