doek

See also: dök

English

Etymology

From Afrikaans doek.

Noun

doek (plural doeks)

  1. (South Africa) A cloth, especially one worn on the head.
    • 1965, Doris Lessing, Landlocked, HarperPerennial 1995, p. 227:
      He said: “What have you got that filthy doek on your head for?”

Anagrams


Dutch

Etymology

From Middle Dutch doec, from Old Dutch *duok, from Proto-Germanic *dōkaz.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /duk/
  • (file)
  • Rhymes: -uk

Noun

doek m, n (plural doeken, diminutive doekje n)

  1. cloth, linen, fabric

doek m (plural doeken, diminutive doekje n)

  1. a piece of cloth

doek n (plural doeken, diminutive doekje n)

  1. screen, curtain (at the theater)
  2. canvas
  3. painting on canvas

Synonyms

  • (piece of cloth): lap

Derived terms

Descendants

Anagrams


Zhuang

Etymology

From Proto-Tai *tokᴰ (to drop). Cognate with Thai ตก (dtòk), Lao ຕົກ (tok), ᦷᦎᧅ (ṫok), Shan တူၵ်း (túuk), Ahom 𑜄𑜤𑜀𑜫 (tuk).

Pronunciation

  • (Standard Zhuang) IPA(key): /tok˥/
  • Tone numbers: doek7
  • Hyphenation: doek

Verb

doek (old orthography dɵk, Sawndip forms 𬻨, , , , , , ⿰氵笠, 𭰚, 𮒏, , ⿰忄徒, 𭢥, , ⿺失独, ⿱入独, ⿱不独, ⿱穴独, 𥫫, ⿰亻独)

  1. to fall; to drop
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