husk
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Middle English huske (“husk”). Perhaps from Old English *husuc, *hosuc (“little covering, sheath”), diminutive of hosu (“pod, shell, husk”), from Proto-West Germanic *hosā, from Proto-Germanic *husǭ, *hausaz (“covering, shell, leggings”), from Proto-Indo-European *kawəs- / kawes- (“cover”). If so, equivalent to hose + -ock.
Alternatively from Middle Low German hūske(n) (“little house, sheath”), Middle Dutch hūskijn (“little house, core of fruit, case”), diminutive of hūs (“house”). Compare Dutch huisje, German Häuschen, both also used for “snailshell”.
husk (plural husks)
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husk (third-person singular simple present husks, present participle husking, simple past and past participle husked)
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Partly imitative, partly from Etymology 1, above, influenced by husky.
husk (uncountable)
husk (third-person singular simple present husks, present participle husking, simple past and past participle husked)
The Australian Pocket Oxford Dictionary, 2nd Ed., Melbourne, Oxford University Press, 1978
husk
husk
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