different between strooke vs strook
strooke
English
Verb
strooke
- Obsolete form of struck.
Anagrams
- Tookers, stooker
Middle English
Noun
strooke
- Alternative form of stroke
Yola
Alternative forms
- strucke
Etymology
From Middle English stryken, from Old English str?can, from Proto-West Germanic *str?kan.
Verb
strooke
- struck
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
strooke From the web:
- what stroke
- what stroke is the least efficient
- what stroke is considered the most difficult
- what stroke is michael phelps known for
- what stroke feels like
- what strokes are there in swimming
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- what stroke do lifeguards use
strook
English
Verb
strook
- (obsolete) simple past tense of strike
- He strook so hard, the bason broke
- The mon?ter mad with rage, and ?tung with ?mart,
His lance directed at the hero's heart :
It ?trook; but bounded from his harden'd brea?t […]
- The mon?ter mad with rage, and ?tung with ?mart,
- 1678, Nathaniel Wanley, The Wonders of the Little World Or a General History of Man (page 210)
- Then the Romans in Antonia fearing his life, cryed out; but the Jews, many at once, strook him with Swords and Spears.
Anagrams
- Toroks
Dutch
Etymology
(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /stro?k/
- Hyphenation: strook
- Rhymes: -o?k
Noun
strook f (plural stroken, diminutive strookje n)
- strip
- Synonym: reep
- stripe
Derived terms
- dwarsstrook
- fietsstrook
- pechstrook
- rijstrook
- strokenverkaveling
- vluchtstrook
Anagrams
- koorts
Middle English
Noun
strook (plural strookes)
- Alternative form of stroke
- 14th Century, Chaucer, The Canterbury Tales, The Knight's Tale
- The brighte swerdes wenten to and fro
So hidously þat with þe leste strook
That it semeþ þat it wolde felle an ook
- The brighte swerdes wenten to and fro
- 14th Century, Chaucer, The Canterbury Tales, The Knight's Tale
strook From the web:
- it struck me
- what does stroke mean
- what does stroke mean in english
- what is strook in english
- what does strook
- what does stroke do
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