Verb (1)pick peas and beans from the garden for dinner
I pick you as my partner
he seems to be trying to pick a fight
still suffering from the shock of his wife's death, he could do no more than pick halfheartedly at his food
continued to pick the block of ice until she was able to extract the shrimp Noun (1)
that team is my pick to win the Super Bowl
the pick of the contestants will go on to the next competition
you have first pick of your office mates for the softball team
in the days when corporal punishment was permissible, it was not uncommon for an inattentive student to get a sharp pick in the head with a blackboard pointer
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Verb
Depending on the location, players can pick from a 23-cell challenge in Southern France or a 45-cell challenge in Mexico City.—Fousia Abdullahi, Fort Worth Star-Telegram, 30 Apr. 2026 If any kind of Bo-Sean disconnect deepens, and the Penners don’t pick a side, history will happily do it for them.—Sean Keeler, Denver Post, 30 Apr. 2026
Noun
The Chiefs were one of nine teams not to exercise the fifth-year option of their 2023 first-round pick, Felix Anudike-Uzomah.—Sam McDowell, Kansas City Star, 3 May 2026 And the Hornets were penalized with the loss of a second-round pick that was sent to the Heat, with teams spending in the millions to purchase such picks during drafts.—Ira Winderman, Sun Sentinel, 3 May 2026 See All Example Sentences for pick
Word History
Etymology
Verb (1)
Middle English piken, partly from Old English *pīcian (akin to Middle Dutch picken to prick); partly from Middle French piquer to prick — more at pike
Noun (2)
Middle English pik
Verb (2)
Middle English pykken to pitch (a tent); akin to Middle English picchen to pitch