different between spooked vs spoked

spooked

English

Adjective

spooked (comparative more spooked, superlative most spooked)

  1. A little scared; worried by a feeling or event. Describing the unsettling feeling there being another unknown ghostly presence.
  2. Being spied upon by security or intelligence services.
  3. (informal) Taken off guard; astonished; surprised.
  4. (philosophy) Duped into believing a spook.

Verb

spooked

  1. simple past tense and past participle of spook

spooked From the web:

  • what spooked the stock market today
  • what spooked the markets today
  • what spooked the crypto market today
  • what spooked means
  • what spooked jem on the night of the radley
  • what spooked my dog
  • why was the stock market so bad today


spoked

English

Etymology

spoke +? -ed

Pronunciation

  • Rhymes: -??kt

Adjective

spoked (not comparable)

  1. having spokes
    • 1986, Mary Dove, The perfect age of man's life (page 84)
      On the north wall of the former chapel of St Anthony in Leominster Priory church in Herefordshire, a ten-spoked wheel, with ten medallions on the circumference and one central medallion, is all that can now be seen []

Verb

spoked

  1. simple past tense and past participle of spoke

spoked From the web:

  • what spoked wheels
  • spoke mean
  • what does spoke mean
  • what are spoked wheels used for
  • what does spiked mean
  • what do spokes mean
  • what does spoke wheels mean
  • spoke in spanish
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