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[ UK /plˈʌk/ ]
[ US /ˈpɫək/ ]
NOUN
  1. the trait of showing courage and determination in spite of possible loss or injury
  2. the act of pulling and releasing a taut cord
VERB
  1. pull lightly but sharply with a plucking motion
    he plucked the strings of his mandolin
  2. sell something to or obtain something from by energetic and especially underhanded activity
  3. strip of feathers
    pluck the capon
    pull a chicken
  4. look for and gather
    pick flowers
    pick mushrooms
  5. pull or pull out sharply
    pluck the flowers off the bush
  6. rip off; ask an unreasonable price

How To Use pluck In A Sentence

  • Brunhild, a mischievous, strong-minded goldfish (the voice of Noah Cyrus, Miley's younger sister), is determined to become a little girl when she's rescued from a jar and befriended by Sosuke (the voice of Frankie Jonas, the Jonas Brothers 'kid brother), a plucky, self-reliant 5-year-old. No Time's Right for 'Traveler's Wife'
  • We drove home in silence and, when he parked in our long driveway, I stopped to pluck some ixora flowers while Nnamabia unlocked the front door. Excerpt: The Thing Around Your Neck by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
  • So I opened each pod one by one, plucking the beans inside.
  • The convention plucked him from the pastorate to head the foreign mission board.
  • From the outset, we get the kind of writing beloved of a certain kind of creative writing teacher: the kind you can pluck out and quote admiringly.
  • Carpe diem (Pluck the day; Seize the day). 
  • Born Princess Sophia of the minor German principality of Anhalt-Zerbst, reared by an ambitious and self-centered mother, she was plucked out of near obscurity by the Russian czarina, Elizabeth, in 1744 as a bride for the heir to the Russian throne, Peter III. The Rise Of an Empress
  • Wendy couldn't help but admire the pluck and ingenuity these youngsters showed.
  • After I had observed every flower, and listened to a disquisition on every plant, I was permitted to depart; but first, with great pomp, he plucked a polyanthus and presented it to me, as one conferring a prodigious favour. Agnes Grey
  • Every four years, our brave lads and lasses tend to venture to foreign slopes with faint expectations, which will be duly fulfilled, as they wind up racing to a plucky 32nd in the giant slalom or 29th in the luge.
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