different between laik vs naik
laik
English
Etymology
From Old English l?c, from Proto-Germanic *laik? (“game, dance, hymn, sport, fight”). Cognates include Old Norse leikr (whence Danish leg (“game”), Swedish leka (“to play”)), Gothic ???????????????????? (laiks, “dance”). Doublet of lek.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /le?k/
Verb
laik (third-person singular simple present laiks, present participle laiking, simple past and past participle laiked)
- (Britain, Northern, dialect) To play (in the sense opposed to work).
Anagrams
- Kail, Kali, Laki, Lika, ilka, kail, kali, kila
Czech
Noun
laik m
- layman (non-cleric)
- layman (non-professional)
Derived terms
- laický m
See also
- amatér m
Latvian
Noun
laik m
- vocative singular of laiks
Nigerian Pidgin
Etymology
From English like.
Verb
laik
- like
Polish
Etymology
From Latin laicus.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?la.ik/
Noun
laik m pers
- layman (non-cleric)
- layman (non-professional)
- Synonyms: amator, dyletant
Declension
Further reading
- laik in Wielki s?ownik j?zyka polskiego, Instytut J?zyka Polskiego PAN
- laik in Polish dictionaries at PWN
Serbo-Croatian
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /l?ik/
- Hyphenation: la?ik
Noun
làik m (Cyrillic spelling ?????)
- layman (non-cleric)
- layman (non-professional)
Declension
Tok Pisin
Etymology
From English like
Noun
laik
- wish, desire
Verb
laik
- an auxiliary verb which indicates the immediate future tense
- (infinitive) to be willing
- like
- want
Turkish
Etymology
Borrowed from French laïque.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?l?.ic/
Adjective
laik (comparative daha laik, superlative en laik)
- secular
Noun
laik (definite accusative lai?i, plural laikler)
- secularist, laicist
See also
- laiklik
- laisizm
laik From the web:
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naik
English
Alternative forms
- nayak, nayaka
Etymology
From Sanskrit ???? (n?yaka, “leader, governor”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?n???k/, /?ne??k/
Noun
naik (plural naiks)
- A lord or governor in South Asia.
- An officer (equivalent to corporal) in a corps of Indian or Nepalese soldiers.
- 1888: Also, he had to keep his temper [...] especially once when he was abused by a Naik he had himself recruited from Isser Jang village — Rudyard Kipling, ‘Miss Youghal's Sais’, Plain Tales from the Hills (Folio Society 2007, p. 26)
Anagrams
- Akin, Inka, Kian, akin, kain, kina
Indonesian
Etymology
From Malay naik, from Classical Malay [Term?], from Old Malay n?yik. First attested in the Kedukan Bukit inscription.
Verb
naik
- to climb, to ascend, to rise
- be on the increase
- to ride in or on something, to travel (in a vehicle)
Malay
Verb
naik
- to climb, to ascend, to rise
- be on the increase
- to ride in or on something, to travel (in a vehicle)
Tagalog
Noun
naik
- suburb (or the surrounding countryside)
naik From the web:
- what naiki in english
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