< Reconstruction:Proto-West Germanic
Reconstruction:Proto-West Germanic/kok
Proto-West Germanic
Etymology
Borrowed from Latin coquus
Noun
*kok m
- cook
Inflection
Masculine a-stem | ||
---|---|---|
Singular | ||
Nominative | *kok | |
Genitive | *kokas | |
Singular | Plural | |
Nominative | *kok | *kokō, *kokōs |
Accusative | *kok | *kokā |
Genitive | *kokas | *kokō |
Dative | *kokē | *kokum |
Instrumental | *koku | *kokum |
Related terms
- *kokōn
Descendants
- Old English: cōc
- Middle English: cook, cok, coke, koke, cuyke, cuke, cooke
- Scots: cuke, cuik
- English: cook
- → Norman: couque
- → Thai: กุ๊ก (gúk)
- Middle English: cook, cok, coke, koke, cuyke, cuke, cooke
- Old Saxon: kok
- Middle Low German: kok, kock, kôk, koyk, kack
- German Low German: Kock
- → Danish: kok
- → Icelandic: kokkur
- → Norwegian: kok
- → Swedish: kock
- → Finnish: kokki
- Middle Low German: kok, kock, kôk, koyk, kack
- Old Dutch: *kok
- Middle Dutch: coc
- Dutch: kok
- Afrikaans: kok
- → French: coq
- → Indonesian: koki (from diminutive form)
- → Petjo: koki, kokkie
- → Japanese: コック (kokku)
- → Russian: кок (kok)
- Limburgish: kók
- Dutch: kok
- Middle Dutch: coc
- Old High German: koh
- Middle High German: koch, koche
- Alemannic German: Choch
- Cimbrian: khoch
- German: Koch
- Middle High German: koch, koche