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  1. Dictionary
    barricade
    /ˌbarɪˈkeɪd/

    noun

    • 1. an improvised barrier erected across a street or other thoroughfare to prevent or delay the movement of opposing forces: "they built barricades in the narrow streets"

    verb

    • 1. block or defend with a barricade: "they barricaded the building and occupied it all night"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. BARRICADE definition: 1. a line or pile of objects put together, often quickly, to stop people from going where they want…. Learn more.

  3. The meaning of BARRICADE is to block off or stop up with a barricade. How to use barricade in a sentence.

  4. noun. a defensive barrier hastily constructed, as in a street, to stop an enemy. any barrier that obstructs passage. verb (used with object) , bar·ri·cad·ed, bar·ri·cad·ing. to obstruct or block with a barricade: barricading the streets to prevent an attack. to shut in and defend with or as if with a barricade:

  5. a line or pile of objects put together, often quickly, to stop people from going where they want to go: A few protestors broke through police barricades and rushed toward the site. erect a barricade Inmates erected a barricade between themselves and the prison guards. See also. man the barricades. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases.

  6. A barricade is anything that prevents people or vehicles from getting through. Construction workers often barricade a street to block traffic. You know how barriers block things from getting through?

  7. 1. to erect a barricade across (an entrance, passageway, etc) or at points of access to (a room, district of a town, etc): they barricaded the door. 2. ( usually passive) to obstruct; block: his mind was barricaded against new ideas.

  8. A usually improvised structure set up, as across a route of access, to obstruct the passage of an enemy or opponent. American Heritage. A barrier thrown up hastily for defense, as in street fighting. Webster's New World. A usually temporary structure set up to restrict or control the movement of people or conveyances.

  9. noun. /ˈbærɪkeɪd/, /ˌbærɪˈkeɪd/ a line of objects placed across a road, etc. to stop people from getting past. The police stormed the barricades the demonstrators had put up. a barricade made of doors, chairs and broken tables. Extra Examples. Oxford Collocations Dictionary. Word Origin. Take your English to the next level.

  10. BARRICADE definition: 1. something that is quickly put across a road or entrance to prevent people from going past 2. to…. Learn more.

  11. barricade meaning, definition, what is barricade: a temporary wall or fence across a road,...: Learn more.