holk

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English

Alternative forms

Etymology 1

From Middle English holk, from Old English holc, holoc (hole, cavity), from Proto-West Germanic *holuk, from Proto-Germanic *hulukaz (a hollow), from Proto-Indo-European *ḱel- (to cover, hide). Equivalent to hole +‎ -ock (diminutive ending).

Cognate with Low German holke, hölke (small hole), German Holk (a type of flat-bottomed barge), Swedish holk (nest, birdhouse), dialectal Norwegian holk, hylke (wooden barrel, cask), Icelandic hólkur (hollow cylinder or tube). Related to hulk.

Noun

holk (plural holks)

  1. (UK dialectal) A hollow cavity.

Etymology 2

From Middle English holken, from Old English *holcian (attested in āholcian, āhlocian (to dig out), from Proto-West Germanic *holukōn, derived from the noun above. Cognate with Middle Low German holken, hȫlken (to hollow out), German Low German uthöhlken (to hollow out).

Verb

holk (third-person singular simple present holks, present participle holking, simple past and past participle holked)

  1. (transitive, UK dialectal) To dig out; make hollow; hollow out.
  2. (transitive, UK dialectal) To dig; dig into; pierce; penetrate; investigate; poke.
  3. (transitive, UK dialectal) To dig up; excavate.
    • 1908, Aberdeen University Studies, volume 35, University of Aberdeen, page 96:
      The Sessioune perceiving gryt perell through the burieing of people in the kirkyaird of thair perroche kirk and within the kirk itself by raising of grene graivis and holking under the kirk vall undermynding of the samyne ordanis fra this furth that na persone presume to mak graivis within the precinct thairof or yit to burie any persone within the boundis of the samine.

Anagrams

Middle Low German

Alternative forms

Etymology

Compare Middle High German holche, Ancient Greek ὁλκάς (holkás, barge), ἕλκειν (hélkein, to drag).

Noun

holk m

  1. hulk (large cargo ship)

References

Swedish

Swedish Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia sv
en (fågel)holk (sense 1)

Etymology

From Old Swedish holker, from Proto-Germanic *hulkaz (cavity, hollow, recess), from Proto-Indo-European *ḱel- (to cover, hide, conceal), cognate with English hulk.

Noun

holk c

  1. a nest box, a birdhouse
    Synonym: fågelholk
  2. a hulk, an old, decommissioned ship (used for storage or housing)
  3. (slang) a pipe stuffed with cannabis, or more rarely a joint

Declension

Declension of holk
nominative genitive
singular indefinite holk holks
definite holken holkens
plural indefinite holkar holkars
definite holkarna holkarnas

References