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- verbpluck (verb) · plucks (third person present) · plucked (past tense) · plucked (past participle) · plucking (present participle)
- take hold of (something) and quickly remove it from its place:"she plucked a blade of grass" · "he plucked a tape from the shelf"
- catch hold of and pull quickly:"she plucked his sleeve" · "brambles plucked at her jeans"
- pull the feathers from (a bird's carcass) to prepare it for cooking:"the turkeys are plucked and cleaned by machine"
- pull some of the hairs from (one's eyebrows) to make them look neater:"whether you pluck your eyebrows depends on your type of looks"
- quickly or suddenly remove someone from a dangerous or unpleasant situation:"the baby was plucked from a grim foster home"
- sound (a musical instrument or its strings) with one's finger or a plectrum:"she picked up her guitar and plucked it idly"
nounpluck (noun)- spirited and determined courage:"it must have taken a lot of pluck to walk along a path marked “Danger”"
- the heart, liver, and lungs of an animal as food.
Originlate Old English ploccian, pluccian, of Germanic origin; related to Flemish plokken; probably from the base of Old French (es)peluchier ‘to pluck’. Sense 1 of the noun is originally boxers' slang.Similar and Opposite Wordsverb- take hold of (something) and quickly remove it from its place:
- catch hold of and pull quickly:
- pull the feathers from (a bird's carcass) to prepare it for cooking:
- sound (a musical instrument or its strings) with one's finger or a plectrum:
noun
Bokep
- People also ask
- "Pluck" means to1234:
- Remove something, especially with a sudden movement.
- Pull or pick off or out.
- Quickly pull something or someone from the place where they are.
- Pull off or out from the place of growth, such as fruit, flowers, feathers, etc.
Learn more:✕This summary was generated using AI based on multiple online sources. To view the original source information, use the "Learn more" links.to remove something, esp. with a sudden movement: Astronauts plan to use the shuttle’s robot arm to pluck the satellite out of space. [ T ] If you pluck something, you remove hair or feathers from it by pulling: She plucked her eyebrows.dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/pluck1 : to pull or pick off or out 2 a : to remove something (such as hairs) from by or as if by plucking pluck one's eyebrowswww.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/pluckto quickly pull something or someone from the place where they are: He plucked a £50 note out of his wallet. A helicopter plucked him from the sea.dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/learner-english/…verb (used with object) to pull off or out from the place of growth, as fruit, flowers, feathers, etc.: to pluck feathers from a chicken. to give a pull at; grasp: to pluck someone's sleeve.www.dictionary.com/browse/pluck Pluck Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster
PLUCK | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary
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