koke
Abinomn
Noun
koke
- grandmother
Dutch
Pronunciation
Audio (file)
Verb
koke
- (archaic) singular present subjunctive of koken
Anagrams
- koek
Japanese
Romanization
koke
- Rōmaji transcription of こけ
Middle Low German
Etymology 1
Alteration of kȫkene. Ultimately from Latin coquina.
Pronunciation
- Stem vowel: ȫ²
- (originally) IPA(key): /kʏœkə/
Noun
kȫke f
- kitchen
Alternative forms
- kȫkene
Etymology 2
From Old Saxon *kōko, from Proto-Germanic *kōkô. Originally masculine.
Pronunciation
- Stem vowel: ô¹
- (originally) IPA(key): /koːkə/
Noun
kôke m or f
- A cake in the wider sense, any object of baked dough.
- A residue from oil production.
Alternative forms
- koeke (spelling variant of kôke)
- kûke
Norwegian Bokmål
Etymology
From Middle Low German kôken, kâken, from Old Saxon *kokōn, from Proto-West Germanic *kôken, from Latin cocō, coquō (“I cook”), from earlier *quoquō, from Proto-Italic *kʷekʷō (“to cook”), from Proto-Indo-European *pékʷeti (“to be cooking”), from *pekʷ- (“to cook, ripen”).
Verb
koke (imperative kok, present tense koker, passive kokes, simple past kokte, past participle kokt, present participle kokende)
- to boil
Derived terms
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References
- “koke” in The Bokmål Dictionary.
Norwegian Nynorsk
Alternative forms
- koka
Etymology
From Latin coquere, via Low German. The noun is derived from the verb.
Verb
koke (present tense kokar/koker, past tense koka/kokte, past participle koka/kokt, passive infinitive kokast, present participle kokande, imperative koke/kok)
- (transitive, intransitive) to boil, seethe
- to cook
Derived terms
- koke inn
Related terms
- kokk
Noun
koke f (definite singular koka, indefinite plural koker, definite plural kokene)
- what is brought to a boil in one go
- a boilery
- Synonym: kokeri
Anagrams
- ekko, okke
West Frisian
Noun
koke n (plural kokes)
- Diminutive of ko