swike
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Middle English swiken, from Old English swīcan (“to wander, depart, cease from, yield, give way, fail, fall short, be wanting, abandon, desert, turn traitor, deceive, rebel”), from Proto-West Germanic *swīkwan, from Proto-Germanic *swīkwaną, *swīkaną (“to dodge, swerve, avoid, betray”), from Proto-Indo-European *sweyg- (“to turn, move around, wander, swing”).
Audio (Southern England): | (file) |
swike (third-person singular simple present swikes, present participle swiking, simple past swoke, past participle swicken)
swike (comparative more swike, superlative most swike)
swike (plural swikes)
From Zhangzhou Hokkien 水雞/水鸡 (súi-ke, “frog”, literally “water; river + fowl; chicken”).
swiké (first-person possessive swikeku, second-person possessive swikemu, third-person possessive swikenya)
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