fike
English
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -aɪk
Etymology 1
From Middle English fiken (“to feign, dissemble, flatter”), from Old English fician (“to wheedle, flatter”) (also found in compound befician (“to deceive”)), from Proto-Germanic *fikōną (“to deceive”), from Proto-Indo-European *peyǵ- (“ill-meaning, evil-minded, treacherous, hostile, bad”). Related to Old English ġefic (“fraud, deceit, deception”), Old English fācen (“deceit, fraud, treachery, sin, evil, crime, blemish, fault”), Middle High German veichen (“dissembling, deceit, fraud”), Latin piget (“it irks, it annoys”).
Verb
fike (third-person singular simple present fikes, present participle fiking, simple past and past participle fiked)
- (transitive, intransitive) To feign; dissemble; flatter.
Etymology 2
From Middle English fiken, fyken (“to fidget, move about restlessly, hasten away”), from Old Norse fíkjast (“to be eager or restless”), from fíka (“to climb, move”). Cognate with Scots fyke (“to move about restlessly, fidget, itch”), Norwegian fika (“to strive, take trouble”), Icelandic fikinn (“eager, greedy”). Related to fig and fidget.
Verb
fike (third-person singular simple present fikes, present participle fiking, simple past and past participle fiked)
Noun
fike (plural fikes)
Derived terms
- fikery
- fiky
Etymology 3
From Middle English fike, from Old English fīc (“fig, fig-tree, fig-disease, venereal ulcer, hemorrhoids”), from Proto-Germanic *fīkaz, *fīgō (“fig”), from Latin fīcus, fīca (“fig, fig-tree”). Cognate with Dutch vijg (“fig”), German Feige (“fig”), Swedish fikon (“fig”), Icelandic fikja (“ficus”). More at fig.
Ese
Middle English
Norwegian Nynorsk
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /²fiːkə/
Synonyms
References
- “fike” in The Nynorsk Dictionary.