wicket

Etymology
From, , from (specifically, Old East Norse) , diminutive of. Compare modern French, ultimately from the same Old Norse source.

Noun

 * 1) A small door or gate, especially one beside a larger one.
 * 2) A small window or other opening, sometimes fitted with a grating.
 * 3) * 1978,, Livia, Faber & Faber 1992 , p. 386:
 * As he did so he heard the shuffle of footsteps entering the chapel and the clicking of the confessional wicket.
 * 1)  A service window, as in a bank or train station, where a customer conducts transactions with a teller
 * 2) a  at a rail station, box office at a cinema, etc.
 * 3)  One of the two wooden structures at each end of the pitch, consisting of three vertical stumps and two bails; the target for the bowler, defended by the batsman.
 * 4)  A dismissal; the act of a batsman getting out.
 * 5)  The period during which two batsmen bat together.
 * 6)  The pitch.
 * 7)  The area around the stumps where the batsmen stand.
 * 8)  Any of the small arches through which the balls are driven.
 * 9)  A temporary metal attachment that one attaches one's lift-ticket to.
 * 10)  A shelter made from tree boughs, used by lumbermen.
 * 11)  The space between the pillars, in post-and-stall working.
 * 12)  An angle bracket when used in HTML.
 * 13)  A device to measure the height of animals, usually dogs.
 * 1)  The space between the pillars, in post-and-stall working.
 * 2)  An angle bracket when used in HTML.
 * 3)  A device to measure the height of animals, usually dogs.
 * 1)  A device to measure the height of animals, usually dogs.

Translations

 * Arabic: خَوْخَة
 * Bulgarian: вратичка
 * Catalan:
 * Czech: ,
 * Danish: låge
 * Finnish: sivuovi, pikkuovi ;
 * Galician:
 * German:, , , Schlupftür
 * Hebrew:
 * Macedonian: вра́тичка
 * Russian:


 * Arabic: خَوْخَة
 * Bulgarian: прозорче
 * Finnish: ;
 * German:
 * Macedonian: про́зорче
 * Ottoman Turkish: قوزغونجق
 * Russian:
 * Spanish:


 * Bulgarian: шубер
 * Esperanto: giĉeto
 * Finnish:
 * French:
 * German:
 * Macedonian: ши́бер
 * Russian:


 * Afrikaans: paaltjies
 * Czech:
 * Finnish:
 * Maori: wīkiti, paitumu
 * Russian:


 * Finnish:


 * Finnish: keskialue


 * Finnish:


 * Finnish:
 * Russian:


 * Finnish:


 * Finnish: kulmasulku