boko
English
Etymology
Circa 1820. Multiple potential origins:
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˈbəʊ.kəʊ/
- (US) enPR: bōʹkō, IPA(key): /ˈboʊ.koʊ/
- Rhymes: -əʊkəʊ
Noun
boko (plural bokos)
- (dated, West Midlands, originally boxing) The nose.
- 1943, W[illiam] E[arl] Johns, Biggles Fails to Return, page 115:
- […] the way he hid the Pernod card and bumped me on the boko when I tried to have a dekko at it proves that.
- 1965, The Illustrated Weekly of India, volume 86, number 1, page 41:
- He sang Landor's lines in a quavering falsetto, then broke raucously into the schoolboy battle-cry of "Hit him on the boko, hit him on the boko, Jericho!"
- 2012, Mary Dobbs Wood, A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to Inventing My Childhood, page 45:
- He let out a yell, his eyes watering from the punch on the boko.
Synonyms
- See Thesaurus:nose
See also
References
Esperanto
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [ˈboko]
- Rhymes: -oko
- Hyphenation: bo‧ko
References
- Sennacieca Asocio Tutmonda (1970) Plena Ilustrita Vortaro de Esperanto (in Esperanto), 3 edition, Paris, published 1987, →ISBN, page 116: “bok/o Ⓝ Virseksulo de remaĉuloj, precipe de kaproj aŭ cervoj.”
French
Etymology
From a word in the Boko language.
Gothic
Hausa
Etymology
Often stated to be borrowed from English book, but Paul Newman disputes this, stating that "boko is an indigenous Hausa word originally connoting sham, fraud, deceit, or lack of authenticity. When the British colonial government imposed secular schools in northern Nigeria at the beginning of the 20th century, boko was applied in a pejorative sense to this new system. By semantic extension, boko came to acquire its current meaning of Hausa written in Roman script and Western education in general."[1]
Noun
bōkṑ m (possessed form bōkòn)
References
- Newman, Paul. 2013. The etymology of Hausa boko. Mega-Chad Miscellaneous Publications, pp. 1-13.http://hdl.handle.net/2022/20965
Moore
Pronunciation
IPA(key): /bò.kó/
Ternate
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [ˈbo.ko]
References
- Rika Hayami-Allen (2001) A descriptive study of the language of Ternate, the northern Moluccas, Indonesia, University of Pittsburgh
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