(n) A pain in the neck due to a strain or pull of the muscles, joints, ligaments and tendons that hold your
head up.
Origin: Middle English 15th century; unknow origin
Prob. Onomatopoeic
I woke up this morning with a crick in my neck.
ache pain
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Crick is actually the way people from Oregon and Washington say "creek", you know like a small flow of water. You'll hear it a lot in the rural parts of the two states.
"Let's go down to the crick and shoot some squirrels."
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"Crick" refers to people who have achieved an Ultra-Rich status. To be labeled as "Crick" is an enormous compliment. Not everyone can be crick. It is a term that solely describes the elite.
-The characters in the TV series, NYC prep are so crick!
-She's lived in 14 different countries! That's so CRICK!
-He just crashed his second Bugatti...I wish I were that crick.
-I heard they spent their summer in Dubai...In the Burj Al Arab! Only crick kids can do that.
-My parents don't work, Im just crick.
-You are so lucky you have such a crick friend like me... otherwise the concierge on my Vertu cellphone wouldn't have reserved us the VIP seats.
-Her mom has a room full of Birkins! SO CRICK!
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A derogatory term for old people
βGod damn, that crick just tried to lick my nutsack!β
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Crick is a top. Crick is the type of person that flirts with friends agressivley but doesnβt mean it or itβs as a joke. Crick is amazing!
Person1 βHey look itβs Crickβ
Person2 βThey must be a topβ
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angled or curved; not straight.
most commonly used to describe an instance of walking, strolling, or leading a path of indeterminate or unusual direction; tends to result in the nudging and/or disruption of one traveling beside you.
Such can be the product of undefined walking spaces normally present in sidewalks and narrow hallways.
As Bridget traveled across the parking lot, she walked cricked, nudging Noyes as he attempted to walk with his arm around her.
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A back or neck pain leading to a spaz
Man that chair was cricking me!