different between blore vs bloke

blore

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /bl??(?)/

Etymology 1

From Middle English bloren, variation of bleren, blaren, from Old English *bl?ran, *bl?rian (to blare, bellow, cry). More at blare.

Verb

blore (third-person singular simple present blores, present participle bloring, simple past and past participle blored)

  1. (archaic, dialectal) To cry; cry out; weep.
  2. (archaic, dialectal) To bray; bleat like an animal; bellow.

Etymology 2

Perhaps from blore above, a variant of blare, affected by blow. Compare also Gaelic and Irish blor (a loud noise).

Noun

blore (plural blores)

  1. (obsolete) The act of blowing; a roaring wind; a blast.

Anagrams

  • Boler, Borel, Robel, Roble, roble

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bloke

English

Etymology

Origin unknown; the following borrowings have been hypothesized:

  • Of Celtic origin, such as Irish ploc (large, stubborn person, literally large, round mass), itself borrowed from English block
  • From Hindi [Term?] or Shelta loke (man).

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation) enPR: bl?k, IPA(key): /bl??k/
  • (General American) IPA(key): /blo?k/
  • Rhymes: -??k

Noun

bloke (plural blokes)

  1. (Australia) An exemplar of a certain masculine, independent male archetype.
  2. (Australia, Britain, New Zealand, informal) A man who behaves in a particularly laddish or overtly heterosexual manner.
  3. (Britain, informal) A fellow, a man; especially an ordinary man, a man on the street. [From 1847]
    Synonyms: see Thesaurus:man
    Antonym: (Britain, informal) blokess
  4. (Britain, naval slang) (A lower deck term for) the captain or executive officer of a warship, especially one regarded as tough on discipline and punishment.
  5. (chiefly Quebec, colloquial) An anglophone (English-speaking) man.

Alternative forms

  • bloak (archaic)

Coordinate terms

  • (Australia, New Zealand): sheila

Derived terms

Translations

References

Further reading

  • bloke on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

Anagrams

  • Kolbe

Cebuano

Etymology

Borrowed from Spanish bloque, from French bloc, from Middle French bloc (a considerable piece of something heavy, block), from Old French bloc (log, block), from Middle Dutch blok (treetrunk), from Old Saxon *blok (log), from Proto-Germanic *blukk? (beam, log), from Proto-Indo-European *bhulg'-, from *bhelg'- (thick plank, beam, pile, prop).

Pronunciation

Noun

bloke

  1. A block; a substantial, often approximately cuboid, piece of any substance.

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