의미:
crook 
★
crook vt.
1 <팔·손가락 등을> (갈고리 모양으로)
구부리다, (활처럼) 굽히다
2 갈고리로 낚아채다
3 《속어》 훔치다(steal), 사취하다(cheat); 속이다
▶ crook a friend 친구를 속이다
▶ 《crook+목+전+명》 crook a thing from a person …에게서 물건을 사취하다
━ vi. 구부러지다, (활처럼) 굽다(bend, curve)
crook one
's[
the]
elbow 《속어》 술을 (많이) 마시다
crook one
's little finger ⇒ finger
━ n.
1 구부러진 갈고리; 《스코》 갈고리 달린 냄비걸이
2 양치기의 (손잡이가 구부러진) 지팡이; =CROSIER
3 (길·강 등의) 굽이, 굴곡[만곡](부); 【음악】 (취주 악기의) 변주관
4 《구어》 악한, 사기꾼, 도둑
▶ a crook film[play] 갱 영화[극]
a crook in one
's lot 《스코》 불행, 역경
by hook or by crook 무슨 짓을 해서라도
have a crook in one
's nose[
character] 코[성격]가 비뚤어져 있다
on the crook 옳지 못한[나쁜] 짓을 하여
━ a. 《호주·구어》 부정한, 싫은, 기분이 언짢은, 화난
go crook (…에게) 화내다 《at, on》; 대들다 《to》
croo 관용구
by hook or by crook
in any way necessary She says that she will go to Italy this year by hook or by crook.
Crooklyn
see Brooklyn
Crooked as a dog's hind leg
Someone who is very dishonest is as crooked as a dog's hind leg.
a scrooge
Scrooge was a Dickens character, famous for being mean: "Why don't you want to buy her a leaving present? You're such a scrooge."
by hook or by crook|crook|hook
adv. phr. By honest ways or dishonest in any way necessary.
The wolf tried to get the little pigs by hook or by crook. The team was determined to win that last game by hook or by crook, and three players were put out of the game for fouling.
by hook or crook
by hook or crook By any means possible, in one way or another. For example,
The car broke down, but I'll get there by hook or crook. This term has a disputed origin. A widely held theory is that it comes from the custom of allowing commoners to take as much wood from royal forests as they could reach with a shepherd's crook and cut down with a billhook. [1300s] Also see the synonym
by any means.
crook
crook In addition to the idioms beginning with
crook, also see
by hook or crook.
* * *
-
crook one's elbow
crook one's elbow
crook one's elbow Also,
bend one's elbow. Drink liquor, especially a great deal. For example,
Bill is known to crook his elbow now and then, or
Uncle Joe rather overdoes it with bending his elbow. Both slangy expressions allude to the motion of lifting a drink to one's lips, which involves bending the elbow. The first dates from about 1820, and the second from about 1900.
hook or crook
hook or crook see
by hook or crook.