duck
— Verb
– English
~ to move (the head or body) quickly downwards or away; "Before he could duck, another stone struck him"
duck
— Verb
– English
~ submerge or plunge suddenly
duck
— Verb
– English
~ avoid or try to avoid fulfilling, answering, or performing (duties, questions, or issues); "He dodged the issue"; "she skirted the problem"; "They tend to evade their responsibilities"; "he evaded the questions skillfully"
duck
— Verb
– English
~ dip into a liquid; "He dipped into the pool"
duck-billed
— Adjective
– English
~ having a beak resembling that of a duck; "a duck-billed dinosaur"
dead duck
— Noun
– English
~ something doomed to failure; "he finally admitted that the legislation was a dead duck"; "the idea of another TV channel is now a dead duck"; "as theories go, that's a dead duck"
diving duck
— Noun
– English
~ any of various ducks of especially bays and estuaries that dive for their food
Donald Duck
— Noun
– English
~ a fictional duck created in animated film strips by Walt Disney
duck
— Noun
– English
~ a heavy cotton fabric of plain weave; used for clothing and tents
duck-billed dinosaur
— Noun
– English
~ any of numerous large bipedal ornithischian dinosaurs having a horny duck-like bill and webbed feet; may have been partly aquatic
duck
— Noun
– English
~ small wild or domesticated web-footed broad-billed swimming bird usually having a depressed body and short legs
duck
— Noun
– English
~ (cricket) a score of nothing by a batsman
duck
— Noun
– English
~ flesh of a duck (domestic or wild)
dabbling duck
— Noun
– English
~ any of numerous shallow-water ducks that feed by upending and dabbling