flaked








noun

  1. a small, flat, thin piece, especially one that has been or become detached from a larger piece or mass: flakes of old paint.
  2. any small piece or mass: a flake of snow.
  3. a stratum or layer.
  4. Slang. an eccentric person; screwball.
  5. Slang. cocaine.
  6. a usually broad, often irregular piece of stone struck from a larger core and sometimes retouched to form a flake tool.

verb (used without object), flaked, flak·ing.

  1. to peel off or separate in flakes.
  2. to fall in flakes, as snow.

verb (used with object), flaked, flak·ing.

  1. to remove in flakes.
  2. to break flakes or chips from; break into flakes: to flake fish for a casserole.
  3. to cover with or as if with flakes.
  4. to form into flakes.

noun

  1. fake2(defs 2, 3).

verb (used with object), flaked, flak·ing.

  1. fake2(def 1).
  2. to lower (a fore-and-aft sail) so as to drape the sail equally on both sides over its boom.

verb, flaked, flak·ing.

  1. flake out, Slang. to fall asleep; take a nap.

noun

  1. a small thin piece or layer chipped off or detached from an object or substance; scale
  2. a small piece or particlea flake of snow
  3. a thin layer or stratum
  4. archaeol
    1. a fragment removed by chipping or hammering from a larger stone used as a tool or weaponSee also blade
    2. (as modifier)flake tool
  5. slang, mainly US an eccentric, crazy, or unreliable person

verb

  1. to peel or cause to peel off in flakes; chip
  2. to cover or become covered with or as with flakes
  3. (tr) to form into flakes

noun

  1. a rack or platform for drying fish or other produce

verb

  1. nautical another word for fake 1

noun

  1. (in Australia) the commercial name for the meat of the gummy shark
v.

early 15c., “to fall in flakes,” from flake (n.). Related: Flaked; flaking.

n.

“thin, flat piece,” early 14c., possibly from Old English *flacca “flakes of snow,” from Old Norse flak “loose or torn piece” (related to Old Norse fla “to skin,” see flay), from Proto-Germanic *flago- (cf. Middle Dutch vlac, Dutch vlak “flat, level,” Middle High German vlach, German Flocke “flake”); from PIE *plak- (1) “to be flat,” extended form of root *pele- (2) “flat, to spread” (see plane (n.1)).

  1. A relatively thin, sharp-edged stone fragment removed from a core or from another flake by striking or prying, serving as a tool or blade itself or as a blank for making other tools. See more at flake tool.
  2. A small, symmetrical, six-sided crystal of snow. Flakes can be large or small and wet or dry, depending on weather conditions. They are white in color because of their large number of reflecting surfaces.
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