streak
Americannoun
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a long, narrow mark, smear, band of color, or the like.
streaks of mud.
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a portion or layer of something, distinguished by color or nature from the rest; a vein or stratum.
streaks of fat in meat.
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a vein, strain, or admixture of anything.
a streak of humor.
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Informal.
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a spell or run.
a streak of good luck.
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an uninterrupted series.
The team had a losing streak of ten games.
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a flash leaving a visible line or aftereffect, as of lightning; bolt.
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Mineralogy. the line of powder obtained by scratching a mineral or rubbing it upon a hard, rough white surface, often differing in color from the mineral in the mass, and serving as an important distinguishing character.
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Plant Pathology.
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an elongated, narrow, superficial lesion on stems or leaf veins, becoming brown and necrotic.
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any disease characterized by such lesions.
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verb (used with object)
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to mark with a streak or streaks; form streaks on.
sunlight streaking the water with gold; frost streaking the windows.
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to lighten or color (strands of hair) for contrastive effect.
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to dispose, arrange, smear, spread, etc., in the form of a streak or streaks.
to streak cold germs on a slide for microscopic study.
verb (used without object)
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to become streaked.
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to run, go, or work rapidly.
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to flash, as lightning.
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to make a sudden dash in public while naked, especially as a prank.
idioms
noun
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a long thin mark, stripe, or trace of some contrasting colour
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(of lightning) a sudden flash
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( as modifier )
streak lightning
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an element or trace, as of some quality or characteristic
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a strip, vein, or layer
fatty streaks
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a short stretch or run, esp of good or bad luck
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mineralogy the powdery mark made by a mineral when rubbed on a hard or rough surface: its colour is an important distinguishing characteristic
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bacteriol the inoculation of a solid culture medium by drawing a wire contaminated with the microorganisms across it
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informal an act or the practice of running naked through a public place
verb
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(tr) to mark or daub with a streak or streaks
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(intr) to form streaks or become streaked
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(intr) to move rapidly in a straight line
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informal (intr) to run naked through a crowd of people in a public place in order to shock or amuse them
noun
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The characteristic color of a mineral after it has been ground into a powder. Because the streak of a mineral is not always the same as its natural color, it is a useful tool in mineral identification.
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A bacterial culture inoculated by drawing a bacteria-laden needle across the surface of a solid culture medium.
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Also called streak plate
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Any of various viral diseases of plants characterized by the appearance of discolored stripes on the leaves or stems.
Other Word Forms
- interstreak verb (used with object)
- streaked adjective
- streakedly adverb
- streakedness noun
- streaker noun
- streaklike adjective
- unstreaked adjective
Etymology
Origin of streak
First recorded before 1000; (for the noun) Middle English streke, akin to strike, Old English strica “stroke, line, mark”; cognate with German Strich, Gothic striks “stroke”; akin to Latin strigil strigil; (for the verb) late Middle English streken “to cross out,” derivative of the noun; strike, stroke 1
Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
The stock edged up 0.2% on Tuesday to snap a five-day losing streak, after closing Dec. 22 at the lowest price since May 6.
From MarketWatch
The stock edged up 0.2% on Tuesday to snap a five-day losing streak, after closing Dec. 22 at the lowest price since May 6.
From MarketWatch
The Eagles are riding a two-game win streak, but against bad teams.
From Los Angeles Times
Read our obituary, an appreciation and a Science of Success column on Reiner’s directing hot streak.
It didn’t use the cash to scoop up more Bitcoin, however, snapping what was a three-week buying streak for the company.
From Barron's
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.