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    [Verb]  | "balk" | \ ˈbȯk \


    1: to refuse abruptly —used with at

    2: to stop short and refuse to proceed

    3: to commit a balk


    Origin: 15th century ;

     Middle English balkyn "to leave an unplowed ridge between furrows, omit, neglect," verbal derivative of balk, balke "strip of unplowed land between fields" {mat|balk:2|};

    [Noun]  | "balk" 


    1: an occurrence in which a pitcher stops suddenly or makes an illegal movement after starting to throw a pitch

    2: failure of a competitor to complete a motion (such as a jump, vault, or dive)

    3: the space behind the balkline on a billiard table


    Origin: before 12th century ;

     Middle English balk, balke, bauke "squared beam of wood, beam of a balance from which pans hang, strip of unplowed land between fields, ridge between furrows left unplowed," going back to Old English balca "strip of unplowed land between fields, ridge between furrows left unplowed," going back to Germanic *balkōn (masculine n-stem) "beam," (whence also Old Frisian balka "beam," Old Saxon balko, Old High German balko, balcho "beam, winepress, gangway on a ship"; with differing ablaut and/or inflection Old English bolca "deck, gangway on a ship," Old High German bolkun [plural] "passageway on a ship," Old Icelandic bǫlkr, balkr "partition, section," bjalki "beam"), going back to dialectal Indo-European *bholǵ- or *bholǵh-, whence also regional Russian bólozno thick board, Slovene blazína "load-bearing beam in a roof or threshing floor," Lithuanian balžíena "flexible crosspiece for securing the back support on a sled";

      * Note : G. Kroonen prefers *bholǵh- to *bholǵ- because a plain voiced stop should have triggered lengthening and acute accent in Balto-Slavic ("Winter's Law"). Aspirated *bholǵh-, however, would result in a voiced rather than voiceless stop in Germanic, a problem that Kroonen circumvents by assuming that -k- in *balkan- reflects a voiceless geminate stop produced by assimilation of a voiced stop and a following *n ("Kluge's Law")—hence an original genitive form *bhl̥ǵh-n-ós would result in *bulkkaz. (See Etymological Dictionary of Proto-Germanic [Leiden, 2013] s.v. *belkan- and The Proto-Germanic N-Stems [Amsterdam/New York, 2011], pp. 148-49.) — A variety of other formations have been assigned to this Indo-European base: 1) Latin sufflāmen "bar used for braking wheeled vehicles," allegedly from *sub-flăg-men, in the notation of A. L. Lloyd et al., Etymologisches Wörterbuch des Althochdeutschen (vol. 1, p. 442), *-bhlьg-mn̥ or *-bhlьg-smn̥. But a deverbal derivation is suggested by the prefix, and -men derivatives in Latin are almost without exception formed from verbs. 2) Greek phalang-, phálanx "log, roller placed under loads or a ship, spar, row, rank, body of troops drawn up in ranks" (see: {phalanx|phalanx}). Earlier literature uniformly assigns this word to *bhl̥ǵ- "beam," with the addition of a laryngeal that drops elsewhere and a "secondary" nasal consonant—hence *bhol-ə2-g- in Chantraine's notation. R. Beekes, however, regards all -ang-/-ing-/-yng- derivatives, most etymologically opaque, as of pre-Greek substratal origin (Etymological Dictionary of Greek, Brill, 2010); see: also note at {pharynx|pharynx}.;

    [Noun]  | "balks" 


    1: something that makes movement or progress difficult;


      * e.g., " ... the constant interruptions proved to be a balk to the flow of conversation "



    •  Antonyms : 

    • (N/A)





    [Noun]  | "balk" 


    1: something that makes movement or progress difficult;


      * e.g., " ... the constant interruptions proved to be a balk to the flow of conversation "



    •  Antonyms : 

    • (N/A)





    [Verb]  | "balks" 


    1: to prevent from achieving a goal;


      * e.g., " ... a young man with big dreams who refused to be balked by the many challenges he faced in making them a reality "





    [Verb]  | "balk" 


    1: to prevent from achieving a goal;


      * e.g., " ... a young man with big dreams who refused to be balked by the many challenges he faced in making them a reality "





    [Verb]  | "balk (at)" 


    1: to show unwillingness to accept, do, engage in, or agree to;


      * e.g., " ... she balked at lending him any more money "





     [ "Balk" ]

    1: The act of going on a walk while drinking beer. A "Beer wALK".

      * e.g.,  ... Dude 1-Hey man you want to go on a walk? Dude 2-Not really, that sounds gay. Dude 1-I'll have beers. Dude 2-Oh a balk! Why didn't you say so. 

     [ "balk" ]

    1: Baseball: To make an illegal motion ingame.

      * e.g.,  ... THe pitcher balked and allowed the runner to go in for the winning run. 

     [ "balke" ]

    1: a guy/boyfriend that tends to be genuinely perfect, extremely fine, and mind-blowingly amazing

      * e.g.,  ... he is so balke! 

     [ "Balk" ]

    1: When, in sexual intercourse, one makes a wrong move, ie, a slap on the ass, and the partner is appauled. They then stop all ensuing action.

      * e.g.,  ... "When I asked her about eating a sandwich in bed last night, it was a total balk." 

     [ "Balked" ]

    1: Balked- trying to hook up with someone and all you get is a long night of strictly cuddling.

      * e.g.,  ... Example Larry was trying to hook up with that girl the other weekend but he was balked because he has no game. 

     [ "Female Balk" ]

    1: The act in which a female deceives a male target in order to draw attention. The penalty of such a balk, like that of a balk by a pitcher in baseball, shall be the awarding of the next "base" to the male.

      * e.g.,  ... "Dude I met an 8 at the bar, but when I took her home and reached up her shirt, I found out her bra was 4 1/2" thick. I immediately called her female balk and was entitled to a dry handy." "I reached into her pants and started to touch her clit, but she wouldn't let me go any further. Turns out she was on her period, as if she didn't know this when I met her at the bar. BALK! I was immediately awarded her mouth." 

     [ "Scone-balking" ]

    1: To offer to bring treats for one group of people, only to then give them to another group of people in spite.

      * e.g.,  ... Jason said he was bringing scones for his crew at work but they didn’t know he was scone-balking. 

     [ "Writer's balk" ]

    1: Similar to writer's block, a writer is mentally incapacitated from writing. However, the incapacitation stems from lack of willpower or lack of interest/enthusiasm in the actual project, rather than a lack of imagination or creativity. Is often paired with, though not necessarily a part of, procrastination. Can be used as a verb (i.e., writer's balking, writer's balked).

      * e.g.,  ... 1: Hey, did you start that essay that 3 assigned you? 

     [ "Shit Balk" ]

    1: When you start heading to the bathroom to take a shit, but realize you are not ready to make a deposit.

      * e.g.,  ... Dave was on his way to use the cadillac stall when he shit balked. He went back to his desk to grab the paper. 

     [ "balk-off" ]

    1: A game-ending illegal move by a pitcher in a tie game, last inning, home team at the plate and a runner on 3rd.

      * e.g.,  ... The Mets suck They really suck - their pitcher just balked Braves win! Braves Win! It's a Balk-off! 

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