The restrictive label for "croak" is often "informal" or "slang." In its primary sense, "croak" refers to the sound made by frogs or toads. However, it is also used colloquially to mean "to die" or "to fail" in a dramatic or humorous context. This dual usage can limit its appropriateness in formal communication.
The restrictive label for picnic would be "consumption break" or "in-transit meal."
The restrictive label for "outlandish" is "extravagant" or "unconventional." It describes something that is bizarre, eccentric, or shockingly unusual, often deviating significantly from the norm or expected standards.
Croak is a noun (a croak) and a verb (to croak).
A restrictive label is a label that restricts a dictionary definition to a certain field or type of usage. One type would be a field label, which refers to the area to which a subject applies (such as Music or Law); another type would be a usage label, which refers to a certain level of language (for example, Slang) or a region (for example, Southwestern U.S.).
James Croak was born in 1951.
Alex Croak was born in 1984.
Yes. Females can croak. That is all i know. My midori can croak, and she wakes me up sometimes
You say it as "croak" In my experience you say it like "crock" not croak
Frogs like to croak after it rains.
John Bernard Croak was born in 1892.
Robert Croak
They don't croak when the water stagnates. They croak when it is mating season, in which case they are calling to a female. unless by croak you mean die, and in which case they will die when the water stagnates because it is unhealthy. It also means you need to re-phrase your question.