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Stroke   /stroʊk/   Listen
Stroke

noun
1.
(sports) the act of swinging or striking at a ball with a club or racket or bat or cue or hand.  Synonym: shot.  "A good shot requires good balance and tempo" , "He left me an almost impossible shot"
2.
The maximum movement available to a pivoted or reciprocating piece by a cam.  Synonyms: cam stroke, throw.
3.
A sudden loss of consciousness resulting when the rupture or occlusion of a blood vessel leads to oxygen lack in the brain.  Synonyms: apoplexy, cerebrovascular accident, CVA.
4.
A light touch.
5.
A light touch with the hands.  Synonym: stroking.
6.
(golf) the unit of scoring in golf is the act of hitting the ball with a club.
7.
The oarsman nearest the stern of the shell who sets the pace for the rest of the crew.
8.
Anything that happens suddenly or by chance without an apparent cause.  Synonyms: accident, chance event, fortuity.  "The pregnancy was a stroke of bad luck" , "It was due to an accident or fortuity"
9.
A punctuation mark (/) used to separate related items of information.  Synonyms: diagonal, separatrix, slash, solidus, virgule.
10.
A mark made on a surface by a pen, pencil, or paintbrush.
11.
Any one of the repeated movements of the limbs and body used for locomotion in swimming or rowing.
12.
A single complete movement.
verb
(past & past part. strokeed; pres. part. strokeing)
1.
Touch lightly and repeatedly, as with brushing motions.
2.
Strike a ball with a smooth blow.
3.
Row at a particular rate.
4.
Treat gingerly or carefully.



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"Stroke" Quotes from Famous Books



... ex-Governor Flower, of New York, a statesman of national fame, a man of largest public spirit, a most valuable citizen, and Colonel Robert Ingersoll, an orator of world-wide fame and of great nobility of soul, dropped as beeves beneath the stroke of an ax because of a fracture of brittle bloodvessels. In both of these cases not many less pounds than ...
— The No Breakfast Plan and the Fasting-Cure • Edward Hooker Dewey

... over Lopez felt that he had done a good stroke of work. He had not exactly made up his mind to keep the father and son apart. That was not a part of his strategy,—at any rate as yet. But he did intend to make himself necessary to the old man,—to become the old man's son, and if possible the ...
— The Prime Minister • Anthony Trollope

... deigning to tell them whether they would be paid. The periagua is a strange rough boat, but the crew were still stranger: I doubt if six uglier little men ever got into a boat together. They pulled, however, very well and cheerfully. The stroke-oarsman gabbled Indian, and uttered strange cries, much after the fashion of a pig-driver driving his pigs. We started with a light breeze against us, but yet reached the Capella de Cucao before it was late. The ...
— A Naturalist's Voyage Round the World - The Voyage Of The Beagle • Charles Darwin

... education had, after all, been realized! When I showed him the first check from New York, covering my pay account for July, he said that it was enough to ruin any boy in the world. Indeed, I myself was conscious of the fact that I had not done a stroke of work all that month for those sixty-five and a half dollars; and in order that my father might be convinced of my determination not to let such unearned wealth lead me into dissipation, I at once offered to lend him fifty dollars to pay a debt due ...
— Forty-Six Years in the Army • John M. Schofield

... red in her face, it do seem strange that 'a wouldn't say such a little thing then... However, then she went on, and that's what made me bring up the story. 'Well, whatever clothes I've won, white or figured, for eyes to see or for eyes not to see' ('a could do a pretty stroke of modesty in those days), 'I'd sooner have lost it than have seen what I have. Poor Mr. Yeobright was took bad directly he reached the fair ground, and was forced to go home again.' That was the last time he ever ...
— The Return of the Native • Thomas Hardy


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