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  1. Dictionary
    Balk
    /bô(l)k/

    verb

    • 1. hesitate or be unwilling to accept an idea or undertaking: "any gardener will at first balk at enclosing the garden" Similar eschewresistrefuse tobe unwilling toOpposite accept
    • 2. (of a pitcher) make an illegal motion, penalized by an advance of the base runners: "the rookie balked and permitted Robinson to score"

    noun

    • 1. an illegal motion made by a pitcher that may deceive a base runner.
    • 2. a roughly squared timber beam.
  2. balk: [noun] a ridge of land left unplowed as a dividing line or through carelessness.

  3. May 27, 2019 · The balk made its way into the rule book in 1898, and for more than 100 years, a pitcher could fake a pickoff throw to one base before firing to another (e.g., fake to third, and throw to first) -- but that, too, was moved under the balk umbrella during the 2013 season. Perhaps the most embarrassing form of the balk is when the pitcher drops ...

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › BalkBalk - Wikipedia

    The balk is still charged to the pitcher, because such a pitch is defined as a "Pitcher Illegal Action." A pitcher is not required to step off the rubber before throwing to an occupied base in a pick-off attempt. With one foot on the rubber in either the windup position or the "set" position, the pitcher may either: 1) deliver the ball to the ...

  5. Balk definition: to stop, as at an obstacle, and refuse to proceed or to do something specified (usually followed by at). See examples of BALK used in a sentence.

  6. BALK definition: 1. to be unwilling to do something or to allow something to happen: 2. in baseball, to stop in the…. Learn more.

  7. BALK meaning: 1. to be unwilling to do something or to allow something to happen: 2. in baseball, to stop in the…. Learn more.

  8. If you balk at your mother's suggestion that you take on more responsibility, you're saying no to added chores. To balk means to refuse to go along with.

  9. 1. (intransitive; usually foll by at) to stop short, esp suddenly or unexpectedly; jib. the horse balked at the jump. 2. (intransitive; foll by at) to turn away abruptly; recoil. he balked at the idea of murder. 3. (transitive) to thwart, check, disappoint, or foil. he was balked in his plans.

  10. 1 [intransitive] balk (at something) to be unwilling to do something or become involved in something because it is difficult, dangerous, etc. Many parents may balk at the idea of paying $100 for a pair of shoes. He balked for a moment. “I can't afford it,” he finally admitted.

  11. Definition of balk verb in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

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