bowk
English
WOTD – 2 December 2012, 2 December 2014
Alternative forms
Etymology
From Middle English bolken, bulken, alteration of earlier balken, from Old English bealcan (“to belch; utter”). Compare Dutch bulken (“to roar”), German bölken. More at bolk.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /boʊk/
Audio (Southern England) (file)
- Rhymes: -oʊk
Verb
bowk (third-person singular simple present bowks, present participle bowking or bowkin, simple past and past participle bowked)
- (Geordie) To belch, to burp.
- 1966, William Mayne, Earthfasts, Peter Smith, published 1989, →ISBN, page 37:
- "That made me bowk," he said; and he bowked again. He took another swig with caution, and gave the bottle to David, and they swigged at it in turn.
- (UK) To vomit.
- 2010, Mike Harper, Little Mickey H: A Norbury Lad, AuthorHouse, →ISBN, page 107:
- Firstly, aged perhaps five or six after polishing off a banana and a slice of bread and butter in the back room at tea time, taking my plate out to the kitchen, I managed to make it only as far as the spin dryer in the hall before bowking richly over the lino.
Scots
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