different between suaku vs shaku

suaku

English

Etymology

From Hokkien ????? (soa?-ku, “mountain turtle”), from ? (soa?, “mountain”) + ??? (ku, “turtle”).

Noun

suaku (plural suakus)

  1. (Singapore, informal) Someone who is not well informed; a country bumpkin.

Adjective

suaku (comparative more suaku, superlative most suaku)

  1. (Singapore, informal) Not well informed; backward.

suaku From the web:



shaku

English

Etymology

A romanization of Japanese ? (shaku). Doublet of chi and chek.

Noun

shaku (plural shaku or shakus)

  1. The Japanese foot, a traditional Japanese unit of length equal to 10 sun or 1/10 of a j?, now standardized as equal to 10/33 of a meter.

Quotations

  • For quotations using this term, see Citations:shaku.

Synonyms

  • Japanese foot

See also

  • ken

References

  • De Visser, M.W. (2003) Dragon in China and Japan, ?ISBN
  • Engel, Heino (1989) Measure and Construction of the Japanese House, ?ISBN
  • Field, Norma (1997) From My Grandmother's Bedside: Sketches of Postwar Tokyo, ?ISBN
  • Jackson, David (2002) Japanese Cabinetry: The Art & Craft of Tansu, ?ISBN
  • Masaaki, Hatsumi (2006) Japanese Sword Fighting: Secrets of the Samurai, ?ISBN
  • Mezur, Katherine (2005) Beautiful Boys/Outlaw Bodies: Devising Kabuki Female-Likeness, ?ISBN
  • Tarver, D.E. (2004) The Book of Five Rings: Miyamoto Musashi, ?ISBN
  • Wheeler, Post (2006) The Sacred Scriptures of The Japanese, ?ISBN

Anagrams

  • Husak, Shuka, Ushak, shuka

Japanese

Romanization

shaku

  1. R?maji transcription of ???

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