To tamper with (a bat) by drilling out part of the head and filling the cavity with cork or similar light, compressible material.
To seal or stop up, especially with a cork stopper.
To leave the cork in a bottle after attempting to uncork it.
To perform such a maneuver.
To fill with cork.
To position one's drift net just outside of another person's net, thereby intercepting and catching all the fish that would have gone into that person's net.
To blacken (as) with a burnt cork.
To injure through a blow; to induce a haematoma.
The cork oak, Quercus suber.
The bark of the cork oak, which is very light and porous and used for making bottle stoppers, flotation devices, and insulation material.
An angling float, also traditionally made of oak cork.
A bottle stopper made from this or any other material.
The dead protective tissue between the bark and cambium in woody plants, with suberin deposits making it impervious to gasses and water.
An aerialist maneuver involving a rotation where the rider goes heels over head, with the board overhead.
Having the property of a head over heels rotation.
To use a snorkel.
A snorkel parka.
A retractable tube fitted in diesel-engine submarines to allow sufficient ventilation that the engines may be used at periscope depth.
A hollow tube, held in the mouth, or mounted on and opening into a diving mask, used by swimmers for breathing underwater.