different between looke vs looky

looke

English

Verb

looke (third-person singular simple present lookes, present participle looking, simple past and past participle looked)

  1. Obsolete spelling of look

Noun

looke (plural lookes)

  1. Obsolete spelling of look

Anagrams

  • okole

Yola

Etymology

From Middle English loken, from Old English l?cian, from Proto-West Germanic *l?k?n.

Verb

looke

  1. to look at

References

  • Jacob Poole (1867) , William Barnes, editor, A glossary, with some pieces of verse, of the old dialect of the English colony in the baronies of Forth and Bargy, County of Wexford, Ireland, J. Russell Smith, ?ISBN

looke From the web:

  • what looked toward the welfare of all
  • what looked like a large pile of ash
  • what looked like black mountains
  • what looked as a late winter's moon
  • what looked in the background of the tea bushes
  • what looked like a tail
  • what looked wan and pale and when
  • what looked like little flags


looky

English

Alternative forms

  • lookee, lookie

Etymology

None of the various attested forms appear in the OED, in Victor & Dalzell’s Concise New Partridge Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional English, nor in Webster’s New Universal Unabridged Dictionary.

According to the RHD, 'looky' (also 'lookee') is an interjection attested from 1875–80 which is an alternative form of the imperative look ye! Similarly, the linguist Andrew L. Sihler indicates that ye, the now-archaic subjective form of the English 2nd pers. plural pronoun, “is fossilized in looky (here) …”.

Pronunciation

  • Rhymes: -?ki

Verb

looky

  1. (sometimes humorous, colloquial) Look.
    • 1877, Burdette, Robert Jones. The Rise and Fall of the Mustache: And Other ‘Hawk-eyetems’. Burlington Publishing Co., 1877. p. 15. [1]
      "… Cain would shout ‘Oh, lookee, lookee pa! what’s that?’"
    • 1936, The American Mercury
      "Looky thar!" "All right, I can see that hole, all right, but the argument was whether the earth was round or flat, and I say it's round!"

Usage notes

Looky is almost always used imperatively, and followed by "here", "there", or "at".

See also

  • lookit

References

  • Sihler, Andrew Littleton. Language History: An Introduction. John Benjamins Publishing Co., 2000. p. 6. [2]

looky From the web:

  • what looky mean
  • looky what we have here
  • looky what he can do
  • looky what i found
  • looky what i can do
  • looky what does it mean
  • what's a looky loo
  • what does looky loo mean
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