wicke

Related to wicke: Wikipedia

wick´e

    (wĭk´e)
a.1.Wicked.
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary, published 1913 by G. & C. Merriam Co.
References in periodicals archive ?
as also fallen away alarmingly in ring just 287 runs at an average e half-centuries and making only against I ghtwatch even Eng o significa m at Austra ll bowler Test by th early in th t to be a arily star has a str 131 wicke udes five fit of seven 2017 Co 2 hman opener against gland's batting may antly by a change.
Parade steps off at Wicke and Center streets, proceeds north on Center to Prairie Avenue, east on Prairie, and then disbands at Prairie and Pearson streets.
Howes looks at the reception of punk in East Germany, comparing and contrasting coverage by the general press and two East German scholars, Thomas Heubner and Peter Wicke, and provides background on the scholars to legitimize and give perspective on their viewpoints.
Punjabi Legends players celebrate a wicke (Photo by M.
5th wicke t falls, Mohammad Nabi departs caught by Hasan Ali off Shaheen Shah Afridi for 7 .
Halo Labs, a venture-backed scientific instrumentation company developing high-throughput biopharmaceutical quality control tools, announced yesterday that it has named Robert Wicke as its new chief executive officer.
These studies particularly include those related to carbon rates in the soil (Guillaume et al., 2016), planting in deforested or degraded areas (Carvalho et al., 2015), as well as its influence on the dynamics of soil use and occupation (Wicke et al., 2011).
And even aga st d a be o take are wicke bre though his first 17 overs in the big time were wicketless, Crane hopes it will lead him to at least a fraction of the figures Warne produced by the end of his career.
his praises as rounders in fortunes He's who is a free play said, wicke"We think he's a guy that has got the goods, and the more he plays at this level the better he will get.
Wicke (1998) coined the term 'celebrity feminist' and was the first to theorise the concept critically.
Just as Austen and Woolf veiled their compositions with blotting paper, evading the public or familial gaze, Bloom imagines lifting such a veil in an act described by Jennifer Wicke as "voyeuristic reading" (1988, 166).