different between poke vs trot

poke

English

Pronunciation

  • (UK) enPR: p?k, IPA(key): /p??k/
  • (US) enPR: p?k, IPA(key): /po?k/
  • Rhymes: -??k

Etymology 1

Middle English, perhaps from Middle Dutch poken or Middle Low German poken (both from Proto-Germanic *puk-), which is probably imitative.

Verb

poke (third-person singular simple present pokes, present participle poking, simple past and past participle poked)

  1. To prod or jab with an object such as a finger or a stick. [from later 14th c.]
  2. To stir up a fire to remove ash or promote burning.
  3. (figuratively) To rummage; to feel or grope around. [from early 19th c.]
  4. (transitive, computing) To modify the value stored in (a memory address).
  5. (transitive) To put a poke (device to prevent leaping or breaking fences) on (an animal).
  6. (transitive) To thrust at with the horns; to gore.
  7. (transitive, informal, Internet) To notify (another user) of activity on social media or an instant messenger.
  8. (transitive) To thrust (something) in a particular direction such as the tongue.
  9. (transitive, slang, vulgar) To penetrate in sexual intercourse.
Synonyms
  • (rummage): fumble, glaum, root; see also Thesaurus:feel around
  • (penetrate in sexual intercourse): drill, nail, pound; see also Thesaurus:copulate with
Derived terms
Translations

Noun

poke (plural pokes)

  1. A prod, jab, or thrust.
  2. (US, slang) A lazy person; a dawdler.
  3. (US, slang) A stupid or uninteresting person.
    (Can we find and add a quotation of Bartlett to this entry?)
  4. (US) A device to prevent an animal from leaping or breaking through fences, consisting of a yoke with a pole inserted, pointed forward.
  5. (computing) The storage of a value in a memory address, typically to modify the behaviour of a program or to cheat at a video game.
  6. (informal, Internet) A notification sent to get another user's attention on social media or an instant messenger.
  7. A poke bonnet.
Derived terms
  • better than a poke in the eye with a sharp stick

Etymology 2

From Middle English poke, from Anglo-Norman poke (whence pocket), from Frankish *poka. More at pocket.

Noun

poke (plural pokes)

  1. (now regional) A sack or bag. [from early 13th c.]
    • c. 1599, William Shakespeare, As You Like It, act 2, scene 7:
      And then he drew a dial from his poke,
      And, looking on it with lack-lustre eye,
      Says very wisely, ‘It is ten o'clock…’
    • 1605, William Camden, Remaines Concerning Brittaine, 1629 edition, Proverbes, page 276:
      When the Pig is proffered, hold vp the poke.
    • 1627, Michael Drayton, Minor Poems of Michael Drayton, 1907 edition, poem Nimphidia:
      And suddainly vntyes the Poke,
      Which out of it sent such a smoke,
      As ready was them all to choke,
      So greeuous was the pother []
    • 1814, September 4, The Examiner, volume 13, number 349, article French Fashions, page 573:
      … and as to shape, a nightmare has as much. Under the poke and the muff-box, the face sometimes entirely disappears …
    • 1946, Mezz Mezzrow and Bernard Wolfe, Really the Blues, Payback Press 1999, page 91:
      In the summertime they'd reach out and snatch your straw hat right off your head, and if you were fool enough to go after it your poke was bound to be lighter when you came out.
    • 2008, James Kelman, Kieron Smith, Boy, Penguin 2009, page 138:
      She did not eat blood-oranges. Her maw gived her one in a poke and she was going to throw it in the bin, Oh it is all black.
  2. A long, wide sleeve.
    Synonym: poke sleeve
  3. (Scotland, Northern Ireland) An ice cream cone.
Derived terms
Translations

Etymology 3

Either a shortening of, or from the same source as, pocan (pokeweed) (q.v.).

Noun

poke (uncountable)

  1. (dialectal) pokeweed

Synonyms

  • see the list at pokeweed
Translations

Etymology 4

From Hawaiian poke (slice crossways)

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?po?.ke?/

Noun

poke (uncountable)

  1. (Hawaii) Slices or cubes of raw fish or other raw seafood, mixed with sesame oil, seaweed, sea salt, herbs, spices, or other flavorful ingredients.

Usage notes

Often typeset as poké to aid pronunciation.

Anagrams

  • kepo

Finnish

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?poke/, [?po?ke?]
  • Rhymes: -oke
  • Syllabification: po?ke

Etymology 1

From portsari (doorman).

Noun

poke

  1. (slang) doorman, bouncer (at a bar or nightclub)
Declension

Etymology 2

From porno (pornography).

Noun

poke

  1. (slang) pornography
Declension

Ido

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?poke/

Adverb

poke

  1. slightly

Maori

Adjective

poke

  1. grimy

Middle English

Alternative forms

  • pok, poc, puke

Etymology

Borrowed from Anglo-Norman poke.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?p??k(?)/

Noun

poke (plural pokes)

  1. sack, pouch, bag

Descendants

  • English: poke
  • Yola: poake, pooke

References

  • “p?ke, n.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007.

Old French

Alternative forms

  • poque, pouche, puche

Etymology

From Frankish *poka.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?p?.k?/

Noun

poke f (oblique plural pokes, nominative singular poke, nominative plural pokes)

  1. sack
    E puis les poudrez bien de sel e les mettez ensemble en une poke de bon kanevaz

Derived terms

  • poket

Descendants

  • ? Middle English: poc, poke, pooke
    • English: poke (regional)
    • Scots: pok, poke, polk, poik

Tocharian A

Etymology

From Proto-Tocharian *pokowjä-, earlier *p?kewjä-, from pre-Tocharian *b?eh???ow-h?en- (definite), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *b?eh???ús (arm). Compare Tocharian B pokai.

Noun

poke

  1. arm

References

  • Adams, Douglas Q. (2013) , “poko*”, in A Dictionary of Tocharian B: Revised and Greatly Enlarged (Leiden Studies in Indo-European; 10), Amsterdam, New York: Rodopi, ?ISBN, page 434

poke From the web:

  • what pokemon are you
  • what pokemon cards are worth money
  • what pokemon can be ditto
  • what pokemon type are you
  • what pokemon evolve with a sun stone
  • what pokemon can learn false swipe
  • what pokemon games are on switch
  • what pokemon can gigantamax


trot

English

Pronunciation

  • (General American) IPA(key): /t??t/
  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /t??t/
  • Rhymes: -?t

Etymology 1

From Middle English trotten, from Old French trotter, troter (to go, trot), from Medieval Latin *trott?, *trot? (to go), from Frankish *trott?n (to go, run), from Proto-Germanic *trud?n?, *trudan?, *tradjan? (to go, step, tread), from Proto-Indo-European *dreh?- (to run, escape). Cognate with Old High German trott?n (to run), Modern German trotten (to trot, plod), Gothic ???????????????????????? (trudan, to tread), Old Norse troða (to walk, tread), Old English tredan (to step, tread). Doublet of tread.

Noun

trot (plural trots)

  1. (archaic, derogatory) An ugly old woman, a hag. [From 1362.]
  2. (chiefly of horses) A gait of a four-legged animal between walk and canter, a diagonal gait (in which diagonally opposite pairs of legs move together).
    • 2000, Margaret H. Bonham, Introduction to: Dog Agility, page 14,
      Dogs have a variety of gaits. Most dogs have the walk, trot, pace, and gallop.
    • 2008, Kenneth W. Hinchcliff, Andris J. Kaneps, Raymond J. Geor, Equine Exercise Physiology: The Science of Exercise in the Athletic Horse, Elsevier, page 154,
      The toelt is comfortable for the rider because the amplitude of the dorsoventral displacement is lower than at the trot. [] The slow trot is a two-beat symmetric diagonal gait. Among the normal variations of the trot of saddle horses, the speed of the gait increases from collected to extended trot.
    • 2009, Gordon Wright, George H. Morris, Learning To Ride, Hunt, And Show, page 65,
      To assume the correct position for the posting trot, first walk, with the body inclined forward in a posting position. Then put the horse into a slow or sitting trot at six miles an hour. Do not post.
  3. A gait of a person or animal faster than a walk but slower than a run.
  4. A brisk journey or progression.
    We often take the car and have a trot down to the beach.
    In this lesson we'll have a quick trot through Chapter 3 before moving on to Chapter 4.
  5. A toddler. [From 1854.]
    • 1855, William Makepeace Thackeray, The Newcomes, 1869, The Works of William Makepeace Thackeray, Volume V: The Newcomes, Volume I, page 123,
      [] but Ethel romped with the little children — the rosy little trots — and took them on her knees, and told them a thousand stories.
  6. (obsolete) A young animal. [From 1895.]
  7. (dance) A moderately rapid dance.
  8. (Australia, obsolete) A succession of heads thrown in a game of two-up.
  9. (Australia, New Zealand, with "good" or "bad") A run of luck or fortune.
    He?s had a good trot, but his luck will end soon.
    • 1994, Noel Virtue, Sandspit Crossing, page 34,
      It was to be a hugely special occasion, for apart from the picture shows at the Majestic, there was usually nothing at all going on in Sandspit to make anyone think they were on a good trot living there.
    • 2004, John Mosig, Ric Fallu, Australian Fish Farmer: A Practical Guide to Aquaculture, 2nd Edition, page 21,
      Should he or she be having a bad trot, the exchange rate will be higher than normal.
  10. (dated, slang, among students) Synonym of horse (illegitimate study aid)
  11. (informal, as 'the trots') Diarrhoea.
    He's got a bad case of the trots and has to keep running off to the toilet.
Synonyms
  • (gait of an animal between walk and canter):
  • (ugly old woman): See Thesaurus:old woman
  • (gait of a person faster than a walk): jog
Derived terms
Translations

Verb

trot (third-person singular simple present trots, present participle trotting, simple past and past participle trotted)

  1. (intransitive) To move along briskly; specifically, to move at a pace between a walk and a run.
    I didn't want to miss my bus, so I trotted the last few hundred yards to the stop.
    The dog trotted along obediently by his master's side.
    • 1927-29, M.K. Gandhi, The Story of My Experiments with Truth, translated 1940 by Mahadev Desai, Part I, Chapter xiv:
      I would trot ten or twelve miles each day, go into a cheap restaurant and eat my fill of bread, but would never be satisfied. During these wanderings I once hit on a vegetarian restaurant in Farringdon Street. The sight of it filled me with the same joy that a child feels on getting a thing after its own heart.
    • c. 1920s-1930s, Charlotte Druitt Cole, Runaway Jane:
      They sent little Jane to the garden to play,
      But she opened the gate, and then trotted away
      Under the hawthorns and down the green lane,
      Bad little, mad little, runaway Jane!
  2. (intransitive, of a horse) To move at a gait between a walk and a canter.
  3. (transitive) To cause to move, as a horse or other animal, in the pace called a trot; to cause to run without galloping or cantering.
Synonyms
  • (to walk rapidly): jog, pace
    • See also Thesaurus:walk, Thesaurus:run
Derived terms
  • hot to trot
  • strong enough to trot a mouse on
Translations

Etymology 2

Short for foxtrot, whose rhythms influenced the genre.

Noun

trot (uncountable)

  1. A genre of Korean pop music employing repetitive rhythm and vocal inflections.
Synonyms
  • ppongjjak

Etymology 3

Noun

trot (plural trots)

  1. (derogatory, properly Trot) Clipping of Trotskyist.

References

Anagrams

  • -tort, ROTT, Rott, TRTO, tort

French

Etymology

From Old French trot, troter, from Medieval Latin trottare, of Germanic origin.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /t?o/

Noun

trot m (plural trots)

  1. trot

Further reading

  • “trot” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).

Anagrams

  • tort

Scots

Etymology

From Middle English trotten, from Old French trotter, troter (to go, trot), from Medieval Latin *trott?, *trot? (to go), from Frankish *trott?n (to go, run), from Proto-Germanic *trud?n?, *trudan?, *tradjan? (to go, step, tread), from Proto-Indo-European *dreh?- (to run, escape).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [tr?t], [trot]

Verb

trot (third-person singular present trots, present participle trottin, past trottit, past participle trottit)

  1. to move at a quick steady pace
  2. (of water) to flow rapidly and noisily, purl, ripple

Derived terms

  • (Ulster) trottle-caur (a low vehicle for moving hay)

Noun

trot (plural trots)

  1. a short, quick pace
  2. the fall, angle, or run on a drain

Derived terms

  • jeoparty trot (a quick motion between running and walking)
  • job-trot (a slow, monotonous or easy going pace, the settled routine or way of doing things)
  • short in the trot (short-tempered)

Slovene

Etymology

From Proto-Slavic *tr?t?.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /tró?t/

Noun

tr??t m anim

  1. drone (male bee)

Inflection

Further reading

  • trot”, in Slovarji Inštituta za slovenski jezik Frana Ramovša ZRC SAZU, portal Fran

Torres Strait Creole

Etymology

From English throat.

Noun

trot

  1. throat

trot From the web:

  • what trotting mean
  • what trots
  • what's trot music
  • what troth means
  • throttle mean
  • trot out meaning
  • trotters meaning
  • trotsky what next
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share

you may also like