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  2. Learn more:
    The congresswoman has a lock on the senatorial nomination. Slang. someone or something certain of success; sure thing: He's a lock to win the championship.
    www.dictionary.com/browse/lock
    Slang for locks As you've probably noticed, the slang synonyms for " locks " are listed above. According to the algorithm behind Urban Thesaurus, the top 5 slang words for "locks" are: dreads, shit locks, campyhancock, kill bill, and lock jaw.
    urbanthesaurus.org/synonyms/locks
     
  3. Dictionary
    lock
    [läk]
    noun
    lock (noun) · locks (plural noun) · a lock (noun)
    1. a mechanism for keeping a door, lid, etc., fastened, typically operated only by a key of a particular form:
      "the key turned firmly in the lock"
      • a device used to prevent the operation or movement of a vehicle or other machine:
        "a bicycle lock"
      • a facility on a computer or mobile phone that requires a user to verify their identity with a passcode or other form of authentication in order to access the full functionality of the device:
        "there's a security lock on the phone and he doesn't know the code"
      • (in wrestling and martial arts) a hold that prevents an opponent from moving a limb.
      • archaic
        a number of interlocked or jammed items:
        "a street closed by a lock of carriages"
    2. a short confined section of a canal or other waterway in which the water level can be changed by the use of gates and sluices, used for raising and lowering vessels between two gates:
      "there was a lock every quarter of a mile"
    3. NORTH AMERICAN ENGLISH
      informal
      (a lock)
      a person or thing that is certain to succeed; a certainty:
      "all of this makes him a lock to make the Hall of Fame"
    4. historical
      a mechanism for exploding the charge of a gun.
    verb
    lock (verb) · locks (third person present) · locked (past tense) · locked (past participle) · locking (present participle)
    1. fasten or secure (something) with a lock:
      "she closed and locked her desk"
      Similar:
      make secure
      make fast
      Opposite:
      • (of a door, window, box, etc.) become or be able to be secured through activation of a lock:
        "the door will automatically lock behind you"
      • enclose or shut in by locking or fastening a door, lid, etc.:
        "he is treated like an unpaid servant and locked in his room"
    2. restrict access to the full functionality or data of (a computer, mobile phone, file, etc.), especially by requiring a user to verify their identity with a passcode or other form of authentication:
      "my computer is locked and I've forgotten my login info" · "I don't want people to read my emails—that's why I lock my phone"
      • (be locked)
        (of a mobile phone) operate only on the network of a particular carrier:
        "the phone is locked to T-mobile"
    3. make or become rigidly fixed or immovable:
      "he locked his hands behind her neck" · "their gaze locked for several long moments" · "the vessel was locked in ice"
    4. go through a lock on a canal:
      "we locked through at Moore Haven"
    Origin
    Old English loc, of Germanic origin; related to German Loch ‘hole’.
    lock
    [läk]
    noun
    lock (noun) · locks (plural noun)
    1. a piece of a person's hair that coils or hangs together:
      "she pushed back a lock of hair"
      • literary
        (locks)
        a person's hair:
        "flowing locks and a long white beard"
      • a tuft of wool or cotton.
      • (locks)
        short for dreadlocks
    Origin
    Old English locc, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch lok, German Locke, possibly also to lock.
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