Wt/sco/lik

< Wt‎ | sco
Wt > sco > lik
See also: Wt/sco/lík and Wt/sco/-lik

Dutch edit

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

lik m (plural likken, diminutive likje n)

  1. lick (a caress wi the tongue)
  2. (Netherlands): jail

Verb edit

lik

  1. first-person seengular present indicative o likken
  2. imperative o likken

Anagrams edit


Greenlandic edit

Affix edit

lik

  1. Indicating somethin provides somethin.
    e.g. Tasiusamik atilik
    A place cried Tasiusaq (leeterally 'providit wi the name Tasiusaq').

Lojban edit

Rafsi edit

lik

  1. rafsi of litki.

Norwegian edit

Etymology 1 edit

Frae Old Norse lík, frae Proto-Germanic *līką, frae Proto-Indo-European *līg-.

Noun edit

lik n

  1. corpse
Inflection edit


Etymology 2 edit

Frae Old Norse líkr, alternative spellin o glíkr, frae Proto-Germanic *galīkaz.

Adjective edit

lik

  1. seemilar, alik
  2. equal
Inflection edit
Antonyms edit


Etymology 3 edit

Frae Old Norse lík (leech).

Noun edit

lik

  1. edge o a sail; leech
Inflection edit

Old Saxon edit

Etymology edit

Frae Proto-Germanic *līką, frae the ruit Proto-Indo-European *līg-. Cognate wi the Auld Inglis līċ, Dutch lijk, Auld Heich German līh (German Leiche), Auld Norse lík (Swadish lik), Gothic 𐌻𐌴𐌹𐌺 (leik).

Cognate wi Auld Saxon gilīk (alik, similar).

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

līk n

  1. deid body, corpse
  2. torso

Declension edit


Serbo-Croatian edit

Etymology edit

Frae Proto-Slavic *likъ.

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

lȋk m (Cyrillic spellin ли̑к)

  1. form, shape, figure
  2. image, effigy
  3. appearance
  4. (colloquial) guy

Declension edit


Swedish edit

Pronunciation edit

Etymology 1 edit

Frae Old Norse líkr, frae Proto-Germanic *galīkaz.

Adjective edit

lik

  1. lik, seemilar tae
  2. lik
Declension edit
Antonyms edit

Etymology 2 edit

Frae Old Norse lík, frae Proto-Germanic *līką, frae Proto-Indo-European *līg-.

Noun edit

Wt/sco/lik n

  1. corpse
  2. the edge o a sail, either free or follaein mast or boom
Declension edit