dak
Marshallese
ipa-rows
Definitions
- a duck
Etymology
Borrowed from English duck (a tightly woven fabric, canvas) derived from Middle English doke (duck) derived from Old English duce, *dūcan (dip, duck, dive) derived from Proto-Germanic *dūkaną (dive, bend down, duck, stoop, dip).
Origin
Proto-Germanic
*dūkaną
Gloss
dive, bend down, duck, stoop, dip
Concept
Semantic Field
Motion
Ontological Category
Action/Process
Kanji
鴨
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- Duck English
- Duckburg English
- Labrador duck English
- Laysan duck English
- beduck English
- duck English
- duck mole English
- duck tape English
- duckable English
- duckbill English
- duckbilled English
- duckburger English
- ducker English
- duckery English
- duckface English
- duckfluff English
- duckfucker English
- duckhood English
- duckie English
- duckish English
- duckism English
- duckkind English
- duckless English
- ducklet English
- ducklike English
- duckling English
- duckly English
- duckman English
- duckmeat English
- duckmole English
- duckness English
- duckpond English
- duckspeak English
- ducktail English
- duckwalk English
- duckweed English
- ducky English
- eiderduck English
- freckled duck English
- mottled duck English
- musk duck English
- seaduck English
- stiff-tailed duck English
- Dagobert Duck German
- Dagobert Duck Dutch, Flemish
- *dʰewb- Proto-Indo-European
- *dūkaną Proto-Germanic
- *ducan Old English
- *dūcan Old English
- duce Old English
- *dukken Middle English
- doke Middle English
- dokeling Middle English
- *dūcan Old Dutch
- dūken Middle Low German
- *dūkan Old Saxon
- dök Volapük