bicycle
bi·cycle [bicycle bicycles bicycled bicycling] noun, verb [ˈbaɪsɪkl] [ˈbaɪsɪkl]
noun
(also informal bike)
a road vehicle with two wheels that you ride by pushing the pedals with your feet
• He got on his bicycle and rode off.
• We went for a bicycle ride on Sunday.
Word Origin:
mid 19th cent.: from bi- ‘two’ + Greek kuklos ‘wheel’.
Example Bank:
• Did you come by bicycle?
• He mounted his bicycle and rode off.
• I dismounted and began to push my bicycle up the hill.
• She came off her bicycle when it skidded on some wet leaves.
• She pedalled her bicycle up the track.
• She tried to pedal her bicycle up the track.
• We watched the boys on their bicycles.
verb intransitive (+ adv./prep.) (old-fashioned)
to go somewhere on a bicycle
compare bike, cycle
Verb forms:
Word Origin:
mid 19th cent.: from bi- ‘two’ + Greek kuklos ‘wheel’.