click
The sound of a click.
Interjection
- The sound of a click.
- Click! The door opened.
Origin
Imitative of the "click" sound; first recorded in the 1500s. Compare Saterland Frisian klikke (“to click”), Middle Dutch clicken (Modern Dutch: klikken (“to click”)), Old High German klecchen (Modern German: klecken, klicken (“to click”)), Danish klikke (“to click”), Swedish klicka (“to click”), Norwegian klikke (“to click”), Norwegian klekke (“to hatch”).
Related
Derived
autoclick clickability clickable click and collect clickbait click-bait click bait click beetle click chemistry click-clack clicker clickety click clickety-click click farm click farmer clickfest click for click fraud clickhaler clicking knife click into gear clickity clickjack clickjacking
Noun Entry 2
- A brief, sharp, not particularly loud, relatively high-pitched sound produced by the impact of something small and hard against something hard, such as by the operation of a switch, a lock, or a latch.
- As I turned the key, the lock gave a click and the door opened.
- There was a click in the front sitting-room. Mr. Pearce had extinguished the lamp. - 1922 October 26, Virginia Woolf, chapter 1, in Jacob’s Room, Richmond, London: […] Leonard & Virginia Woolf at the Hogarth Press,...
- The act of snapping one's fingers.
- An ingressive sound made by coarticulating a velar or uvular closure with another closure.
- tsk is a click in English.
Synonyms: click consonant
- The sound made by a dolphin.
- The act of operating a switch, etc., so that it clicks.
- The act of pressing a button on a computer mouse or similar input device, both as a physical act and a reaction in the software.
- A single instance of content on the Internet being accessed.
- The dirty secret of the internet is that all this distraction and interruption is immensely profitable. Web companies like to boast about[…]and so on. But the real way to build a successful online business is to be...
- Internet traffic to legal pornography sites in the UK comprised 8.5% of all "clicks" on web pages in June – exceeding those for shopping, news, business or social networks, according to new data obtained exclusively by...
- A pawl or similar catch.
- A wheel, with teeth in which a click or pawl engages to prevent backward motion; or the same with addition of another click through which power is imparted at intervals to move the wheel. - 1943, Chilton's Jewelers'...
- A knock or blow.
- This roused the tinker's choler, already provoked at Tugwell's amorous freedom with his doxy, and he gave him a click in the mazard. Tugwell had not been used tamely to receive a kick or a cuff; he, therefore, gave the...
- A limb contortion at the joint, part of vogue dancing.
- A click track.
- But I knew I needed a click, so we put a click on the 24-track, which then was synced to the Moog Modular. - 2013, “Giorgio by Moroder”, in Giorgio Moroder (lyrics), Random Access Memories, performed by Daft Punk:
Forms
Noun Entry 3
- A detent, pawl, or ratchet, such as that which catches the cogs of a ratchet wheel to prevent backward motion.
- The latch of a door.
Origin
From Middle English clike, from Old French clique (“latch”).
Forms
Noun alt of, alternative
- Alternative spelling of klick (“kilometers; kilometers per hour”).
Forms
Noun government, hobbies
- A kind of throw.
- inside click; outside click; cross click
Origin
From Middle English cleken, a variant of clechen (“to grab”), perhaps from Old English *clēċan, *clǣċan, a byform of clyċċan (“to clutch”). More at clutch.
Forms
Noun US, alt of
- Misspelling of clique.
Verb Entry 7
- To cause to make a click; to operate (a switch, etc) so that it makes a click.
- [Jove] clicked all his marble thumbs. - 1603 (first performance), Ben[jamin] Jonson, Seianus His Fall, London: […] G[eorge] Elld, for Thomas Thorpe, published 1605, →OCLC, (please specify the page):
- She clicked back the bolt which held the window sash. - 1847 January – 1848 July, William Makepeace Thackeray, chapter L, in Vanity Fair […], London: Bradbury and Evans […], published 1848, →OCLC:
- When merry milkmaids click the latch, / And rarely smells the new-mown hay, / […] / Alone and warming his five wits, / The white owl in the belfry sits. - 1842, Alfred Tennyson, “Song.—The Owl.”, in Poems. […], volume...
- To emit a click.
- Surely that picture will be fixed for ever, for I heard the cameras clicking round me like crickets in a field. - 1929, Arthur Conan Doyle, When the World Screamed:
- To snap one's fingers.
- To press and release (a button on a computer mouse).
- To select a software item using, usually, but not always, the pressing of a mouse button.
- To visit (a website).
- Visit a location, call, or click www.example.com.
- To navigate by clicking a mouse button.
- I soon grew bored and clicked away from the site.
- From the home page, click through to the Products section.
- To make sense suddenly.
- Then it clicked—I had been going the wrong way all that time.
- To get along well.
- When we met at the party, we just clicked and we’ve been best friends ever since.
- After tea, the bright boys wash, clean their boots, and change into their “second-best” attire, and stroll forth[…]; sometimes to saunter, in company with others, up and down that parade until they “click” with one of...
- To tick.
- the varnish'd clock that click'd behind the door - 1770, [Oliver] Goldsmith, The Deserted Village, a Poem, London: […] W[illiam] Griffin, […], →OCLC:
- To take (a photograph) with a camera.
- Brad immediately took out his Iphone^([sic]) and clicked a picture of the plant and posted it up on Google and clicked search. - 2014, Dhisti Desai, Innocent Desire, page 107:
- They clicked some pictures outside his sea facing bungalow and left dejected again. - 2017, Pankaj Upadhyay, Homecoming:
- To achieve success in one's career or a breakthrough, often the first time.
Forms
Verb obsolete
- To snatch.
- ‘I take 'em to prevent abuses,’ Cants he, and then the Crucifix And Chalice from the Altar clicks. - 1716, Thomas Ward, England's Reformation:
Forms
Verb US, alt of
- Misspelling of clique.