Definitions
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
- n. A flat thin piece or layer; a chip.
- n. Archaeology A stone fragment removed from a core or from another flake by percussion or pressure, serving as a preform or as a tool or blade itself.
- n. A small piece; a bit.
- n. A small crystalline bit of snow.
- n. Slang A somewhat eccentric person; an oddball.
- n. Slang Cocaine.
- v. To remove a flake or flakes from; chip.
- v. To cover, mark, or overlay with or as if with flakes.
- v. To come off in flat thin pieces or layers; chip off.
- flake out Slang To fall asleep or collapse from fatigue or exhaustion.
- flake out Slang To act in an odd or eccentric manner.
- flake out Slang To lose interest or nerve.
- n. A frame or platform for drying fish or produce.
- n. A scaffold lowered over the side of a ship to support workers or caulkers.
Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia
- n. A small flat or scale-like particle or fragment of anything; a thin fragment; a scale: as, a flake of tallow; a flake of flint; a flake of snow. As applied to chips or fragments detached from a mass of rock or mineral, flake often refers especially to such chips or fragments produced in the process of making stone weapons, especially in prehistoric times. Flint and obsidian are the materials which, in consequence of their characteristically conchoidal fracture, can most readily be made to take a desired form by chipping or flaking; but when these were not to be had, chert, jasper, quartz, and even rocks of various kinds, have been utilized in this way. There are many localities where these chips or flakes (as the larger and more regular chips are sometimes designated), cores, broken tools, stone hammers, and other similar relics, are found heaped together in large quantities, indicating the abandoned sites of workshops.
- n. Among florists, any variety of carnation in which the petals are marked with stripes of one color upon a white ground.
- To break or separate in flakes or layers; peel or scale off: absolutely or with off.
- To form or break into flakes: as, the frost flaked off the plaster.
- To cover with or as with flakes; fleck.
- n. A hurdle or portable framework of wicker, boards, or bars, for fencing; a fence; a paling.
- n. Nautical, a small stage hung over a ship's side, from which to calk or repair any breach.
- n. A platform for drying salted fish; a fish-flake. It keeps the fish clean, and allows a current of air to pass under them, so that they dry evenly. It may consist of a series of horizontal hurdles at a convenient height from the ground, or of three-edged strips of wood nailed to frames resting on trestles or horses, with one edge uppermost so that the pickle may easily drain away. Flakes are usually made so that they can be taken down and put up when required.
- n. A rack for bacon.
- n. A wooden frame for oat-cakes.
- n. A sort of flap fastened to a saddle to keep the rider's knee from contact with the horse.
- n. Same as fake.
Wiktionary
- n. UK Dogfish.
- n. Australia The meat of the gummy shark.
- n. A loose filmy mass or a thin chiplike layer of anything; a film; flock; lamina; layer; scale; as, a flake of snow, paint, or fish.
- n. archaeology A prehistoric tool chipped out of stone.
- n. informal A person who is impractical, flighty, unreliable, or inconsistent; especially with maintaining a living.
- v. To break or chip off in a flake.
- v. colloquial To prove unreliable or impractical; to abandon or desert, to fail to follow through.
- v. technical To store an item such as rope in layers
- v. Ireland, slang to hit (another person).
GNU Webster's 1913
- n. prov. Eng. A paling; a hurdle.
- n. A platform of hurdles, or small sticks made fast or interwoven, supported by stanchions, for drying codfish and other things.
- n. (Naut.) A small stage hung over a vessel's side, for workmen to stand on in calking, etc.
- n. A loose filmy mass or a thin chiplike layer of anything; a film; flock; lamina; layer; scale.
- n. A little particle of lighted or incandescent matter, darted from a fire; a flash.
- n. (Bot.) A sort of carnation with only two colors in the flower, the petals having large stripes.
- n. colloq. a person who behaves strangely; a flaky{2} person.
- n. A flat layer, or fake, of a coiled cable.
- v. To form into flakes.
- v. To separate in flakes; to peel or scale off.
WordNet 3.0
- v. cover with flakes or as if with flakes
- v. come off in flakes or thin small pieces
- n. a crystal of snow
- n. a small fragment of something broken off from the whole
- v. form into flakes
- n. a person with an unusual or odd personality
Etymologies
- A name given to dogfish to improve its marketability as a food, perhaps from etymology 1. (Wiktionary)
- Middle English. Middle English fleke, from Old Norse fleki, hurdle, shield used for defense in battle. (American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition)
Examples
“The thin flake of carbon, the duo created in 2004, just as thick as an atom is exceptionally strong and it conducts electricity like copper.”
The Huffington Post: Santhosh Mathew, PhD: Thinnest Material Bags the Thickest Prize
“What part of ditz, airhead, flake is not being understood?”
“And in the black, black silence of the country night, "the sweep of easy wind and downy flake" is deafeningly beautiful.”
“Then the thin flake-like brown seeds of the annual Stocks or Gillyflowers; one little square of paper holds the white Princess Alice variety, so many thick double spikes of fragrant snow lie hidden in each thin dry flake!”
“Recall the flake who shot up the White House with the machinegun?”
Elizabeth Edwards Spells Out For Wolf What's Wrong With Ann Coulter
“The type of fish used doesn't really bother me, here in Victoria it is usually shark, gummy or school shark and is called flake in the shops.”
“I bet there are a few of you that are thinking shark, yuk, but a gummy shark, so named because it has no teeth, is probably the most popular fish in Victoria, served as it is in every fish 'n' chip shop as flake, which is what the flesh does when cooked and as a bonus, there are absolutely no bones in it.”
“The other kind is called flake yse, blue, very hard and thinne not aboue three fadomes thick at the farthest, and this kinde of yse bordreth close vpon the shore.”
The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation
“The nickel flake, which is Edison's ingenious solution of the conductivity problem, is of itself a most interesting product, intensely practical in its application and fascinating in its manufacture.”
“A flake is a 'fool with energy ', as the Russian proverb puts it.”
Lists
These user-created lists contain the word ‘flake’.
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WF - list of EN back-formations
Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_English_back-formations
aborigine, accrete, acculturate, admix, admixture, adolesce, adsorb, adulate, advect, aesthete, air-condition, anticline and 212 more...
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IMCO - EU nomenclature
includes words of the "Prodcom list"
veal, valve, used, yak, wax, wan, teak, vat, vas, strip, use, strap and 4515 more...
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Down on the Farm
All things farm and agriculture related.
barn, tractor, cow, hay, horse, pig, corn, plough, irrigation, subsidies, crops, plant and 260 more...
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people (bad)
nouns for bad people / words that describe bad people.
goto the good people list
( people, character, descriptor, noun )culprit, perpetrator, tormentor, swindler, bamboozler, nincompoop, thief, liar, back stabber, vandal, burglar, cheater and 85 more...
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Favorites
disparage, partisan, cupidity, hokum, tussle, odious, dastardly, overture, plane, chronic, peering, peer and 328 more...
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Words I have to learn
exasperate, felony, weld, fraud, worksheet, ransom, rehearse, preliminary, offshore, parole, infamous, sieve and 436 more...
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Words for ice and snow
Environmental Ice and Snow
(excluding all the food ice)ice, icicle, frazil, frasil, sleet, slush, snow, flurry, snowfall, freeze, flash-freeze, quick-freeze and 618 more...
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Tuesday words
just the next words that come along
nasality, transignification, lapsarian, disciple, slanguage, atwitter, avast, ahoy, asleep, awake, hymnody, glissade and 573 more...
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Like True Newfoundlanders
A place for me to store my Newfoundland English, as I learn it. (Might take a while.)
screech-in, screech, moose milk, bucklish, buckly, buckaloon, buccaloon, newfoundland sock, rum runner, scravel, newfoundland, oonchook and 112 more...
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fbharjo's Words
jumelle, kef, kenspeckle, lautitious, essentic, pilpulistic, impavid, cicurant, clou, chrysostomic, miasma, teleology and 1625 more...
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Aeonn's Words
discombobulation, dank, crass, abolishment, quite, ubiquitous, crank, catapult, sponge, click, queer, irish and 124 more...
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Words Words and more Words
ruckus, bustle, ominous, odious, abominable, atrocious, appal, abysmal, dismal, calamity, debacle, fiasco and 231 more...
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5-1
Hecko, words! Thanks for staying with me. :-)
avenue, viscous, zeroth, usher, scarcely, viability, snout, sole, purify, riotous, menace, moist and 364 more...
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Flying Into Snow
Snow-related words.
I love snow. Send me as much as you can.snow, flake, flurry, sastruga, slush, powder, blizzard, snowman, whiteout, sleet, sneg, salju and 75 more...
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mplspingora's Words
truncated, sphagnum, woody, splendid, inordinate, folic, acid, you, foliate, genre, supplicate, marble and 47 more...
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Watch Your Language, Young Man
Ahh, euphemisms. Every schoolkid's favorite pastime. They sound so naughty, but you can't really get in trouble for using them, can you?
darn, dang, shoot, shucks, flip, geez, gee whiz, golly, son of a gun, crud, shyster, holy schnikes and 58 more...
Tweets
Looking for tweets for flake.

chained_bear In Newfoundland, a platform built on poles and spread with boughs for drying codfish on land. Dec 10, 2007