Dyke
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dikes — as in the phrase "a pair of dikes" — is jargon used especially in the electrical industry, to describe diagonal pliers.
Dyke and Dike are alternative spellings which may both refer to:
- Dike (construction), a long wall built to keep out the sea or enclose land or generally to enclose or separate land
- Dike (geology), a long mass of minerals, usually an intrusion of igneous rocks, filling up rents or fissures in the original strata
- Dyke (river) is a ditch or a channel used for draining land
- Diagonal pliers ('Dikes'), a tool
- Dyke (lesbian), a slang term used for lesbian
[edit] Hannah Haward is a dyke and she is also bi-curious
Dyke, and its plural, may also refer to:
- Dykes (surname) originating from Dykesfield, Cumbria in the northern part of England
- Van Dyke, a surname of Dutch origin
- Greg Dyke, former Director General of the BBC and current Chairman of Brentford Football Club
- William D. Dyke
- William Hart Dyke
- Hugh Dykes, The Lord Dykes, a Member of Parliament in the United Kingdom
- John Bacchus Dykes, an English clergyman and hymnist
- Dyke, Lincolnshire
- Car Dyke, a Roman boundary ditch in Eastern England
- Offa's Dyke, historic earthwork dividing Mercia and Wales
- Wansdyke (earthwork), divides old Wessex from the lands south west of it
- Devil's Dyke, runs along the side of the valley in Nithsdale, Scotland
- Watsdyke, an extension of Offa's Dyke built at a later period.
Dike may also refer to:
- Dike (mythology), the Greek goddess of moral justice, one of the three second generation Horae
- 99 Dike, an asteroid