A "stable wicket" refers to a cricket pitch that maintains consistent playing conditions throughout a match, allowing for fair competition between batters and bowlers. When it "creaks," it suggests that the surface is beginning to show signs of wear or deterioration, potentially affecting the ball's bounce and spin. This term often indicates that while the wicket was initially reliable, it may be becoming less predictable as the game progresses.
In the dark old inn yard a stable wicket creaked
a stable wicket is a small door or gate.
yes creaked is a verb.
The floor creaked from the weight of the chair.
The old rusty door creaked
It is from the game of cricket. The wicket is the playing field. If you have a sticky wicket, it is muddy or soggy, and hard to play on. The term has since come to mean any sort of difficult situation.
The correct spelling is creaked.Some example sentences are:The staircase creaked as he climbed up.The door no longer creaked.That floorboard always creaked when you walked on it.
The door creaked like an old man's bones after a long rest. The door creaked like the floor of an abandoned house. The door creaked like thin ice while a fat kid walks over it.
It means expressing anger or resentment through a harsh or squeaky sound, as if a door hinges are creaking.
Leg Before Wicket. It's where the leg is in between the ball and the wicket and the ball hits the leg. It is classified as if the ball had actually hit the wicket. See related link for more information.
I think you mean wicket keeper. He is a fielder that stands behind the wickets with a pair of gloves in cricket. He can stump people and catches the ball when it goes past the batsman
The phrase "sticky wicket" means a difficult situation. The term derives from the game of Cricket, referring to the difficulty of playing on a wet, sticky pitch.