Hyphenation:o‧k
ok
( informal ) Alternativeletter-case form ofOK ok
water ok
genitive plural ofoko FromOld Norse haukr , fromProto-Germanic *habukaz , Cognate withSwedish hök .
ok m
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FromLatin octo .
ok
eight (8 )FromOld Norse ok , fromProto-Germanic *juką , fromProto-Indo-European *yugóm .
ok n (genitive singular oks , plural ok )
yoke (Thisetymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at theEtymology scriptorium .)
ok
( anatomy ) belly ,stomach FromMiddle Low German andOld Saxon ōk , likeGerman auch .
ok
also ;and also From the obsolete dialectalokik ( “ to learn a lesson, to be edified ” ) , itself from aTurkic language.[ 1] CompareKyrgyz угуу ( uguu ,“ to hear, to understand ” ) .
ok (plural okok )
cause Holonyms: okság ,ok-okozati viszony Coordinate terms: következmény ,okozat reason ,motive Synonym: indok Compound words with this term at the beginning
Compound words with this term at the end
ok inBárczi, Géza andLászló Országh .A magyar nyelv értelmező szótára (“The Explanatory Dictionary of the Hungarian Language”, abbr.:ÉrtSz. ). Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, 1959–1962. Fifth ed., 1992:→ISBN FromOld Norse ok , fromProto-Germanic *juką , fromProto-Indo-European *yugóm .
ok n (genitive singular oks ,nominative plural ok )
yoke Synonym: klafi FromEsperanto ok , fromLatin octo , ultimately fromProto-Indo-European *oḱtṓw .
ok
eight (8)ok
water FromProto-Turkic *ok .
ok
arrow N. A. Baskakov, S.M. Šapšala, editor (1973 ), “ok ”, inKaraimsko-Russko-Polʹskij Slovarʹ [Karaim-Russian-Polish Dictionary ], Moscow: Moskva,→ISBN ok
foot ok
water ok
water ok
fish net .netting .screen ;sieve .ok
and ...Gunther Michelson (1973 )A thousand words of Mohawk , University of Ottawa Press, page83 ok
toburn ok
water ok f
water ( in a well ) ok m
water ( drawn, e.g. out of well ) sap (infruits )Cornelis L. Voorhoeve,Languages of Irian Jaya Checklist (1975, Canberra: Pacific Linguistics) Jan Honoré Maria Cornelis Boelaars,The Linguistic Position of South-Western New Guinea (III), chapter XII,Kati language FromOld Norse ók .
ok
past tense ofake ok n (plural oket )
( pre-1938 ) alternative form ofåk From earlierauk , fromProto-Germanic *auk ( “ also ” ) . Cognate withOld English ēac ,Old Frisian āk ,Old Saxon ōk ,Old High German ouh ,Gothic 𐌰𐌿𐌺 ( auk ) .
ok (runic script ᚢᚴ )
and ok
also ,too Icelandic:og Norwegian Nynorsk:òg Norwegian Bokmål:òg Swedish:ock FromProto-Germanic *juką , fromProto-Indo-European *yugóm .
ok n (genitive oks ,plural ok )
yoke Zoëga, Geir T. (1910 ) “ok2 ”, inA Concise Dictionary of Old Icelandic , Oxford: Clarendon Press ; also available at theInternet Archive Zoëga, Geir T. (1910 ) “ok ”, inA Concise Dictionary of Old Icelandic , Oxford: Clarendon Press ; also available at theInternet Archive FromProto-West Germanic *auk .
ōk
also ,too Middle Low German:ôk Low German:ook Plautdietsch:uk FromOld Norse ok .
ok (runic script ᚢᚴ )
and ok
also ,too FromOld Norse ok .
ok n
yoke Declension of ok (stronga -stem)
ok n
genitive plural ofoko ( some meanings )
ok
Alternativeletter-case form ofOK ok m (plural oks )
Alternativeletter-case form ofOK ok
water FromOld Norse ok , fromProto-Germanic *juką , fromProto-Indo-European *yugóm .Doublet ofzygot .
ok n
ayoke (wooden bar used to connect two oxen by their shoulders) ayoke (wooden bar placed over the shoulders, used to carry for example buckets) ( figuratively ) ayoke , aburden underoket av outhärdligt förtryck underthe yoke of unbearable oppression Vintern lägger sig som ett tungtok på våra axlar Winter descends like a heavyyoke on our shoulders lyftaoket från någons axlar liftthe yoke from someone's shoulders ayoke (part of a shirt draped over the shoulders) ok
Alternative form ofoch ok
Alternative form ofock ok
Alternative form ofokt ( “ eight ” ) FromOttoman Turkish اوق , fromProto-Turkic *ok ( “ arrow ” ) . CompareOld Turkic 𐰸 ( ok ,“ arrow ” ) .
ok (definite accusative oku ,plural oklar )
arrow ok
only ,to ok
oneself ok
water ok
heat ok m
water Australian Languages: Classification and the comparative method (2004,→ISBN transnewguinea.org , citing D. C. Laycock,Languages of the Lumi Subdistrict (West Sepik District), New Guinea (1968), Oceanic Linguistics, 7 (1): 36-66 (asokw )FromProto-Tai *ʔoːkᴰ ( “ toexit ” ) .[ 1]
Cognate withThai ออก ( ɔ̀ɔk ) ,Northern Thai ᩋᩬᨠ ,Lao ອອກ ( ʼǭk ) ,Lü ᦀᦸᧅᧈ ( ˙ʼoak¹ ) ,Shan ဢွၵ်ႇ ( ʼàuk ) ,Ahom 𑜒𑜨𑜀𑜫 ( ʼok ) .
Perhaps related toChinese 屙 (ē ).
ok (Sawndip forms 𭃀 [ 2] or ⿰出悪 [ 2] or 𫫇 [ 2] or 恶 [ 2] or 𫥫 [ 2] or 屋 [ 2] or 跒 [ 2] or ⿰出屋 [ 2] or 喔 [ 2] or 𡁮 [ 2] or 沃 [ 2] ,1957–1982 spelling ok )
toexit toprovide ; togive toexcrete toproduce ; tomake tosprout ; toput forth ; tobud tooccur ; tohappen ; tocome up toexceed ; togo over topresent ; to put forth; toraise ; topose toissue ; torelease topublish