Word of the Day
: July 12, 2024bilk
playWhat It Means
Bilk is typically applied in contexts relating to fraud and deceit. It can mean "to cheat out of something valuable," or "to evade payment of or to," or "to obtain something by defrauding someone."
// Prosecutors contend that the defendant bilked hundreds of investors out of their life savings.
// Some vendors accuse the company of bilking its creditors.
// The organization's treasurer had bilked thousands of dollars from the nonprofit over the course of one year.
bilk in Context
"In a scheme revealed in February, Arlington was bilked out of nearly a half-million dollars by international hackers impersonating a vendor working to rebuild the community's high school." — John Hilliard, The Boston Globe, 11 June 2024
Build your vocabulary! Get Word of the Day in your inbox every day.
-
- The business’s new computer system proved not to be a panacea.

Hear a word and type it out. How many can you get right?
TAKE THE QUIZ
Pick the best words!
PLAYDid You Know?
Initially, bilking wasn't considered cheating—just good strategy for cribbage players. Language historians aren't sure where bilk originated, but they have noticed that its earliest uses occur in contexts relating to the game of cribbage. Part of the scoring in cribbage involves each player adding cards from their hand to a pile of discards called the "crib." At the end of a hand, the dealer gets any points in the crib. Strategically, then, it's wisest for the dealer's opponents to discard the cards most likely to "balk," or put a check on, the dealer's score (or in other words, the ones least likely to contribute to point-making combinations). Etymologists theorize that bilk may have originated as an alteration of that card-game balk.
Test Your Vocabulary
Rearrange the letters to reveal a verb that can mean both "to defeat" and "to cheat": NKSUK
VIEW THE ANSWERPodcast
More Words of the Day
-
Apr 26
nonchalant
-
Apr 25
travail
-
Apr 24
ostensible
-
Apr 23
slough
-
Apr 22
liaison
-
Apr 21
bodacious