different between strikee vs striked

strikee

English

Etymology

strike +? -ee

Noun

strikee (plural strikees)

  1. The recipient of a strike, especially a physical blow; one who has been struck.
    • 1823, Blackwood’s Edinburgh Monthly Magazine, Volume 14, No. 78, July 1823, p. 71,[1]
      On which the man [] putting forth his sinister bunch of fives, saluted the youngster under the ear with a blow that projected him about seven feet six inches across the street, deposited him in a place of safety in the sink, and sent the blood gushing forth, with the most fluent liberality, from mouth, nose, and ears. “Now,” said the striker, “I’m Neat; what dost thee say to that?”—“Nothing at all,” replied the strikee, “only that I am satisfied.”
    • 1910, Agnes Deans Cameron, The New North, New York: Appleton, Chapter 12, p. 231,[2]
      Each man is allowed to strike his adversary a number of blows, the recipient of the buffeting being bound by the laws of the game to stand quiescent and take what is coming to him. Then striker and strikee change places and reverse the courtesy.

Anagrams

  • Keister, keister, kerites, kiester

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striked

English

Verb

striked

  1. (nonstandard) simple past tense and past participle of strike

See also

  • struck

Anagrams

  • skirted

striked From the web:

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