different between kocka vs cutup
kocka
Hungarian
Etymology
Borrowed from a West Slavic language, probably from Czech. Compare Czech kostka.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [?kot?sk?]
- Hyphenation: koc?ka
- Rhymes: -k?
Noun
kocka (plural kockák)
- (geometry) cube (regular polyhedron having six identical square faces)
- block, cube (any object in an approximately cuboid shape)
- die, dice (regular polyhedron used in games, with numbers or symbols on each side)
- Synonym: dobókocka
- dice game (game played predominantly or solely by rolling dice)
- Synonym: kockajáték
- square (rectangular cell in a grid or pattern)
- Synonym: négyzet
- (film, photography) frame (one of the many single photographic images on a roll of film)
- Synonyms: filmkocka, képkocka
- (comics) panel (an individual drawing in a comic strip or comic book)
- Synonym: képregénykocka
- (slang) nerd, geek (person who is intellectual but possibly socially inept, particularly an expert in computers)
- Synonym: kockafej
Declension
Derived terms
(Expressions):
- a kocka el van vetve
- fordul a kocka
- kockán forog
- kockára tesz
References
Further reading
- kocka in Bárczi, Géza and László Országh: A magyar nyelv értelmez? szótára (’The Explanatory Dictionary of the Hungarian Language’). Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, 1959–1962. Fifth ed., 1992: ?ISBN
Lower Sorbian
Noun
kocka f (masculine equivalent kocor)
- Superseded spelling of kócka.
Declension
Serbo-Croatian
Etymology
From Proto-Slavic *kost?ka (“small bone”), since dice were made of bones (Proto-Slavic *kost?).
Noun
k?cka f (Cyrillic spelling ??????)
- (geometry) cube
- (games) die
Declension
Slovak
Etymology
From Proto-Slavic *kost?ka (“small bone”), since dice were made of bones (Proto-Slavic *kost?).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?k?t?ska/
Noun
kocka f (genitive singular kocky, nominative plural kocky, genitive plural kociek, declension pattern of žena)
- (geometry) cube
- (games) die
Declension
Derived terms
- kockový
- kocô?ka
Further reading
- kocka in Slovak dictionaries at slovnik.juls.savba.sk
Slovene
Etymology
From Proto-Slavic *kost?ka (“small bone”), since dice were made of bones (Proto-Slavic *kost?).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /kó?t?ska/
Noun
k??cka f
- die (used in games of chance)
Inflection
Further reading
- “kocka”, in Slovarji Inštituta za slovenski jezik Frana Ramovša ZRC SAZU, portal Fran
kocka From the web:
- what ko?ka means
- what does kocka mean
cutup
English
Alternative forms
- cut up, cut-up
Etymology
From the verb phrase cut up.
Noun
cutup (plural cutups)
- Someone who cuts up; someone who acts boisterously or clownishly, for example, by playing practical jokes.
- Synonyms: class clown, prankster
- (literature) A work produced by the aleatory literary technique of cutting up and rearranging a written text to create a new text.
Anagrams
- upcut
cutup From the web:
- what is mean by cut up
- what does cut up mean
- what does cutup
- what do cut up mean
- what happened to cutup and droidbait
- what happened to cutup
- cut up person
- what rhymes with cut up
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