lurk
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Middle English lurken, from Old Norse *lúrka, possibly from Proto-Germanic *lūrukōną (“to be lying in wait, lurk”), equivalent to lour + -k (frequentative suffix).
Cognate with Norwegian Nynorsk lurka (“to sneak away, go slowly”), dialectal Swedish lurka (“to dawdle, be slow in one's work”), Saterland Frisian lüürkje (“to look secretly, spy”), West Frisian luorkje (“to lurk”), Middle Low German lûrken (“to deceitfully stalk”).
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lurk (third-person singular simple present lurks, present participle lurking, simple past and past participle lurked)
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lurk (plural lurks)
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lurk
Inherited from Old Swedish lurker (“prowler”). Cognate of Old Norse lurkr (“cudgel”). Arguably derived from Old Irish lorg (“rod”), probably through Old Norse lurkr (“club, staff”).
lurk c
nominative | genitive | ||
---|---|---|---|
singular | indefinite | lurk | lurks |
definite | lurken | lurkens | |
plural | indefinite | lurkar | lurkars |
definite | lurkarna | lurkarnas |
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