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Definition 2024
Dook
dook
dook
See also: Dook
English
Verb
dook (third-person singular simple present dooks, present participle dooking, simple past and past participle dooked)
- (of a ferret) To make a certain clucking sound.
- Timothy Smith, Chinook the Ferret's Halloween Adventure (page 1)
- The sun has gone down - what's that dooking sound? It must be trick or treating time. I glance across the bedroom floor and I see Chinook and Nikomi's ferret eyes.
- Timothy Smith, Chinook the Ferret's Halloween Adventure (page 1)
Etymology 2
From duck.
Verb
dook (third-person singular simple present dooks, present participle dooking, simple past and past participle dooked)
- (dialect) duck
- 1835, James Baillie Fraser, The Highland smugglers, Volume 2
- But anger is a blin' guide — he dooked from the first blow, an' it passed wi' little ill; an' he raised his drawn sword, an' made a wild cut at my head...
- 1835, James Baillie Fraser, The Highland smugglers, Volume 2
Etymology 3
From Dutch doek (“cloth, fabric, canvas”), from Middle Dutch doec, from Old Dutch *dōc, from Proto-Germanic *dōkaz (“cloth”), from Proto-Indo-European *dwōg-, *dwōk- (“cloth”). See also duck (cloth).
Alternative forms
- doock
Noun
dook (plural dooks)
Derived terms
- dooky
- sail-doock