doca
Portuguese
/ˈdɔ.kɐ/
noun
Definitions
- (nautical) dock
Etymology
Derived from English dock (wharf, cut off, plant) derived from Middle English dock (mud channel) derived from Middle Dutch docke (channel, a doll) derived from Italian doccia (conduit, canal, shower) derived from Latin ducta.
Origin
Latin
ducta
Gloss
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- airdock English
- burdock English
- butterdock English
- candock English
- dock English
- dockable English
- dockage English
- docker English
- dockhand English
- dockisation English
- dockise English
- dockization English
- dockize English
- dockland English
- docklands English
- dockless English
- docklike English
- dockman English
- dockmaster English
- dockmistress English
- dockside English
- dockworker English
- dockworking English
- docky English
- dockyard English
- drydock English
- redock English
- spacedock English
- spatterdock English
- stardock English
- undock English
- ducta Latin
- ductionem, ductio Latin
- ductus Latin
- dokk Hungarian
- doccia Italian
- dok Dutch, Flemish
- douche French
- *dewk- Proto-Indo-European
- dok Polish
- dock Middle English
- dokke Middle English
- *doketje Middle Dutch
- docke Middle Dutch
- dok Turkish
- docke Middle Low German