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Donnez autant d'informations que possible sur l'histoire de la domestication des chats domestiques. Comment se fait-il que les gens aient commencé à domestiquer les chats en Espagne ? Quels personnages célèbres de l’histoire espagnole sont connus pour être propriétaires de chats domestiques ? Le rôle des chats dans la société espagnole moderne.
ONE OF THE TWO SETS OF THREE STUMPS AND TWO BAILS AT EITHER END OF A CRICKET PITCH, GUARDED BY A BATSMAN WHO, WITH HIS BAT, ATTEMPTS TO PREVENT THE BALL FROM HITTING THE WICKET; NAMED AFTER "WICKET GATE", A SMALL GATE, WHICH IT HISTORICALLY RESEMBLED
Wicket (cricket); Wickets; Wicket (dismisal); Wicket (dismissal); Wickets taken; Wicket (object); Wicket (area); Wicket (out); Wicket (croquet); Wicket (roque); Wickets (croquet); Wickets (roque); Put down the wicket; Putting down a wicket
wicket
¦ noun
1. Cricket each of the sets of three stumps with two bails across the top at either end of the pitch, defended by a batsman.
the prepared strip of ground between these two sets of stumps.
the dismissal of a batsman.
2. a small door or gate, especially one beside or in a larger one.
N. Amer. an opening in a wall or screen through which customers are served.
3. N. Amer. a croquet hoop.
Phrases
at the wicket Cricket
1. batting.
2. by the wicketkeeper.
a sticky wicket
1. Cricket a pitch that has been drying after rain and is difficult to bat on.
2. informal a tricky or awkward situation.
Origin
ME: from Anglo-Norman Fr. and Old North. Fr. wiket; origin uncertain, usu. referred to the Gmc root of ON vikja 'to turn, move'.
wicket
(wickets)
Frequency: The word is one of the 3000 most common words in English.
1.
In cricket, a wicket is a set of three upright sticks with two small sticks on top of them at which the ball is bowled. There are two wickets on a cricket pitch.
N-COUNT
2.
In cricket, a wicket is the area of grass in between the two wickets on the pitch.
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3.
In cricket, when a wicket falls or is taken, a batsman is out.
N-COUNT
Wicket
·noun The ground on which the wickets are set.
II. Wicket·noun The space between the pillars, in postand-stall working.
III. Wicket·noun A place of shelter made of the boughs of trees, - used by lumbermen, ·etc.
IV. Wicket·noun A small gate by which the chamber of canal locks is emptied, or by which the amount of water passing to a water wheel is regulated.
V. Wicket·noun A small framework at which the ball is bowled. It consists of three rods, or stumps, set vertically in the ground, with one or two short rods, called bails, lying horizontally across the top.
VI. Wicket·noun A small gate or door, especially one forming part of, or placed near, a larger door or gate; a narrow opening or entrance cut in or beside a door or gate, or the door which is used to close such entrance or aperture. Piers Plowman.
Wikipédia
Wicket
In cricket, the term wicket has several meanings:
It is one of the two sets of three stumps and two bails at either end of the pitch. The fielding team's players can hit the wicket with the ball in a number of ways to get a batsman out.
The wicket is guarded by a batsman who, with his bat (and sometimes with his pads, but see the laws on LBW, leg before wicket), attempts to prevent the ball from hitting the wicket (if it does, he is bowled out) and to score runs where possible.
Through metonymic usage, the dismissal of a batsman is known as the taking of a wicket,
The cricket pitch itself is sometimes referred to as the wicket.