Usually means: Utensil for piercing, lifting food.
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We found 47 dictionaries that define the word fork:

General (27 matching dictionaries)
  1. fork: Merriam-Webster.com
  2. fork: Oxford Learner's Dictionaries
  3. fork: American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language
  4. fork: Collins English Dictionary
  5. fork: Vocabulary.com
  6. Fork, fork: Wordnik
  7. fork: Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary
  8. Fork, Fork: InfoVisual Visual Dictionary
  9. fork: Wiktionary
  10. fork: Webster's New World College Dictionary, 4th Ed.
  11. fork: The Wordsmyth English Dictionary-Thesaurus
  12. fork: Infoplease Dictionary
  13. fork: Dictionary.com
  14. fork: Online Etymology Dictionary
  15. fork: Cambridge Essential American English Dictionary
  16. Fork (blockchain), Fork (chess), Fork (computing), Fork (disambiguation), Fork (file system), Fork (filesystem), Fork (intersection), Fork (operating system), Fork (software), Fork (software development), Fork (software engineering), Fork (system call), Fork: Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia
  17. Fork: Online Plain Text English Dictionary
  18. fork: Webster's Revised Unabridged, 1913 Edition
  19. fork: Rhymezone
  20. fork: AllWords.com Multi-Lingual Dictionary
  21. fork: Free Dictionary
  22. fork: Mnemonic Dictionary
  23. fork: Dictionary/thesaurus
  24. fork: Wikimedia Commons US English Pronunciations
  25. fork: Webster's 1828 Dictionary

Art (1 matching dictionary)
  1. Epicurus.com Spanish Glossary (No longer online)

Business (1 matching dictionary)
  1. Fork (disambiguation), fork: Legal dictionary

Computing (3 matching dictionaries)
  1. fork: Free On-line Dictionary of Computing
  2. Webopedia (No longer online)
  3. Fork (digging), Fork (software development), fork: Encyclopedia

Medicine (3 matching dictionaries)
  1. Dorland's Illustrated Medical Dictionary (No longer online)
  2. online medical dictionary (No longer online)
  3. fork: Medical dictionary

Miscellaneous (4 matching dictionaries)
  1. Brilliant Dream Dictionary (No longer online)
  2. FoRK: Acronym Finder
  3. AbbreviationZ (No longer online)
  4. fork: Idioms

Science (3 matching dictionaries)
  1. fork: LITTLE EXPLORERS(TM) Picture Dictionary
  2. Fork: Eric Weisstein's World of Mathematics
  3. Archaeology Wordsmith (No longer online)

Slang (2 matching dictionaries)
  1. fork, fork, fork, fork: Green’s Dictionary of Slang
  2. the fork: Urban Dictionary

Sports (2 matching dictionaries)
  1. Fork: Chess Dictionary
  2. Fork: Bicycle Glossary

Tech (1 matching dictionary)
  1. AUTOMOTIVE TERMS (No longer online)

(Note: See forked as well.)

Definitions from Wiktionary (
)
American English Definition British English Definition
noun:  Any of several types of pronged (tined) tools (physical tools), as follows:
noun:  A utensil with spikes used to put solid food into the mouth, or to hold food down while cutting.
noun:  Any of several types of pronged tools for use on farms, in fields, or in the garden or lawn, such as a smaller hand fork for weeding or a larger one for turning over the soil.
noun:  Such a pronged tool having a long straight handle, generally for two-handed use, as used for digging, lifting, mucking, pitching, etc.
noun:  A tuning fork.
noun:  (by abstraction, from the tool shape) A fork in the road, as follows:
noun:  (physical) An intersection in a road or path where one road is split into two.
noun:  (figurative) A decision point.
noun:  (by abstraction, from the tool shape) A point where a waterway, such as a river or other stream, splits and flows into two (or more) different directions.
noun:  (metonymically, and analogous to any prong of a pronged tool) One of the parts into which anything is furcated or divided; a prong; a branch of a stream, a road, etc.; a barbed point, as of an arrow.
noun:  (figuratively, decision-making) A point in time where one has to make a decision between two life paths.
noun:  (metonymically) Either of the (figurative) paths thus taken.
noun:  (figuratively, by abstraction, from a physical fork) (software development, content management, data management) A departure from having a single source of truth (SSOT), sometimes intentionally but usually unintentionally.
noun:  (metonymically) Any of the pieces/versions (of software, content, or data sets) thus created.
noun:  (software) The launch of one or more separate software development efforts based upon a modified copy of an existing project, especially in free and open-source software.
noun:  (software) Any of the software projects resulting from the launch of such separate software development efforts based upon a copy of the original project.
noun:  (content management) The splitting of the coverage of a topic (within a corpus of content) into two or more pieces.
noun:  (content management) Any of the pieces/versions of content thus created.
noun:  (cryptocurrencies) A split in a blockchain resulting from protocol disagreements, or a branch of the blockchain resulting from such a split.
noun:  (chess) The simultaneous attack of two adversary pieces with one single attacking piece (especially a knight).
noun:  (British, vulgar) The crotch.
noun:  (colloquial) A forklift.
noun:  Either of the blades of a forklift (or, in plural, the set of blades), on which the goods to be raised are loaded.
noun:  (cycling, motorcycling, by abstraction from a pronged tool's shape) In a bicycle or motorcycle, the portion of the frameset holding the front wheel, allowing the rider to steer and balance, also called front fork.
noun:  The upper front brow of a saddle bow, connected in the tree by the two saddle bars to the cantle on the other end.
noun:  (obsolete) A gallows.
verb:  (transitive, intransitive) To divide into two or more branches or copies.
verb:  (transitive, intransitive, computing) To spawn a new child process by duplicating the existing process.
verb:  (transitive, intransitive, software engineering) To launch a separate software development effort based upon a modified copy of an existing software project, especially in free and open-source software.
verb:  (transitive, software engineering) To create a copy of a distributed version control repository.
verb:  (transitive) To move with a fork (as hay or food).
verb:  (transitive, British) To kick someone in the crotch.
verb:  (intransitive) To shoot into blades, as corn does.
noun:  (mining) The bottom of a sump into which the water of a mine drains.
verb:  (mining, transitive) To bale a shaft dry.

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