different between kris vs troy

kris

English

Alternative forms

  • crease, creese, keris, kreese

Etymology

Borrowed from Malay keris. Doublet of kalis. Recognized as part of English ca. 1580.

Noun

kris (plural krises or krisses)

  1. An Indonesian or Malay dagger with a wavy, or rigid serpentine blade.
  2. A Moro sword with an asymmetrical blade.

Verb

kris (third-person singular simple present krises, present participle krising or krissing, simple past and past participle krised or krissed)

  1. (transitive) To stab with a kris.
    • 1901, George Manville Fenn, Running Amok: A Story of Adventure, page 100:
      [...] when I was a boy, but Rajah Sul and Sultan Abdel krissed and speared all the poor people and burned the campongs.
    • 2017, John D. Greenwood, Forbidden Hill (Monsoon Books, ?ISBN):
      One Malay seaman had resisted the rattan halter––he had been krissed to death on the spot and thrown overboard.

See also

  • kalis

Anagrams

  • Risk, irks, kirs, riks, risk

Dutch

Etymology

Borrowed from Javanese keris (??????), from Old Javanese ngiris (??????).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /kr?s/
  • Hyphenation: kris
  • Rhymes: -?s
  • Homophone: Chris

Noun

kris f or m (plural krissen)

  1. kris (Indonesian or Malay with a wavy blade)

Romani

Etymology

Borrowed from Byzantine Greek ?????? (krísis, judgement, decision).

Noun

kris f (plural krisa)

  1. law, rule

Serbo-Croatian

Etymology

Borrowed from English kris, creese, from Malay.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /krî?s/

Noun

kr?s m (Cyrillic spelling ?????)

  1. kris

Declension


Swedish

Pronunciation

Noun

kris c

  1. crisis (unstable situation in political, social, economic or military affairs)

Declension

Related terms

Anagrams

  • riks-, risk, skri

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troy

English

Etymology

From Middle English troye, from Anglo-Norman. According to the American Heritage Dictionary, probably first used at a fair in Troyes, France.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /t???/
  • Rhymes: -??

Adjective

troy (not comparable)

  1. Of, or relating to, troy weight.

Anagrams

  • Tory, ryot, tory, tyro

Old French

Alternative forms

  • treis, trois

Etymology

From Latin tr?s, from Proto-Indo-European *tréyes.

Numeral

troy

  1. three

Descendants

  • Middle French: troys
    • French: trois
  • Walloon: troes

Spanish

Etymology

Originally in the compound onza troy (troy ounce); a loan translation of English troy ounce, perhaps after the French city of Troyes.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?t?oi/, [?t??oi?]
  • Rhymes: -oi

Adjective

troy (invariable)

  1. troy

Derived terms

  • onza troy

References

  • “troy” in Diccionario de la lengua española, Vigésima tercera edición, Real Academia Española, 2014.

troy From the web:

  • what troy looked like
  • what troy mean
  • what troy ounce
  • what troye sivan song are you
  • what's troy landry's net worth
  • what's troy aikman's net worth
  • what's troy polamalu doing now
  • what's troydan real name
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