Englishfor English speakers
crack
Verb
—
When something cracks it breaks along a line, maybe not a straight line. It might break into two pieces, or it might break but the two pieces are still attached.
She cracked an egg and put the inside of the egg into a bowl.
crack
Noun
—
A crack is the line where something is breaking.
There is a crack from the edge of this plate to the middle. It will break soon.
—
A loud sound like the sound of something breaking.
It was raining, and she saw a flash of lightning and heard the crack of thunder.
—
A strong, fairly cheap form of cocaine; crack often comes in the form of a rock and it is usually smoked in a crack-pipe.
"I wouldn't use it, if I was going to use it I can afford real cocaine. Crack is wack." -
fork
Noun
—
An instrument for eating, with 3 or 4 sharp points called tines, all in the same direction.
I ate with my fork.
—
A place where one thing becomes two.
She came to a fork in the road.
—
(chess) A situation where two or more enemy pieces are in danger from the same piece.
He moved his queen and caught me in a fork.
fork
Verb
—
To split, become two.
The road forks there.
—
To move something with a fork.
He forked food into his mouth.