sok
Dutch (Brabantic)
/sɔk/
noun
Definitions
- sock
Etymology
Inherited from Middle Dutch socke derived from Latin soccus (slipper, buskin, a light shoe slipper, low shoe) derived from Ancient Greek σύκχος (a kind of shoe) derived from German Socke (sock).
Origin
German (Berlin)
Socke
Gloss
sock
Concept
Semantic Field
Clothing and grooming
Ontological Category
Person/Thing
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- bedsock English
- footsock English
- oversocks English
- poopsock English
- sock English
- sockette English
- sockful English
- sockless English
- socklet English
- socklike English
- sockmaker English
- undersock English
- windsock English
- soccus Latin
- Baumwollsocke German
- Nahkampfsocke German
- Schlauchsocke German
- Socke German
- Wollsocke German
- zokni Hungarian
- socco Italian
- pop Dutch, Flemish
- sokpop Dutch, Flemish
- zueco Spanish, Castilian
- σύκχος Ancient Greek
- *sukkaz Proto-Germanic
- ソック Japanese
- socc Old English
- socke Middle English
- sokkr Old Norse
- zoca Galician
- zoco Galician
- socke Middle Dutch
- soc Old High German
- zeķe Latvian
- sok Afrikaans
- socke Middle Low German
- sukā Livonian