different between unwritten vs koro
unwritten
English
Etymology
From Middle English unwriten, from Old English unwriten, un?ewriten (“unwritten”), equivalent to un- +? written.
Adjective
unwritten (not comparable)
- Not written.
- Oral or otherwise communicated without writing.
- Implicit or understood but not formally articulated.
- It's an unwritten rule that you lock the gate when you leave the swimming pool.
- Containing no writing; blank.
- unwritten paper
Translations
Verb
unwritten
- past participle of unwrite
See also
- unwrittenness
- written
- de facto
- oral
unwritten From the web:
- what unwritten constitution
koro
English
Etymology
Possibly from Makasar garring koro' (lit. koro illness, "shrinking of the toilet", Matthes 1859), Buginese, or Malay. See "Koro § Etymology and geographical background" at Wikipedia for a full discussion.
Noun
koro (uncountable)
- (psychology) A delusional syndrome found in Malay and southern Chinese populations, characterized by a belief that the subject's penis will retract into the abdomen and cause death.
References
- Mathes B. F. (1859). Makassaarsch-Hollandsch Woordenboek. Amsterdam: Het Nederlandsch Bijbelgenootschap te Amsterdam, p. 43 ("inkrimping van het gemak").
Anagrams
- Kroo, kroo, roko, rook
Esperanto
Etymology
From Latin cor.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?koro/
- Hyphenation: ko?ro
Noun
koro (accusative singular koron, plural koroj, accusative plural korojn)
- heart
- clapper (tongue of a bell)
Fijian
Etymology
From Proto-Central-Pacific *koro, from Proto-Oceanic *koro (compare Tongan kolo).
Noun
koro
- town
- village (use koro lailai to specify that it's smaller in size than a town)
- settlement
Finnish
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?koro/, [?ko?ro?]
- Rhymes: -oro
- Syllabification: ko?ro
Etymology 1
Unknown. Possibly borrowed from Proto-Germanic *skur?.
Noun
koro
- (heraldry) line of partition, line
- (botany) open scar
Declension
Etymology 2
Back-formation from korottaa.
Noun
koro
- (ballistics) elevation (angle)
Declension
Anagrams
- orko
Fur
Noun
koro (plurale tantum)
- water
References
- Angelika Jakobi, A Fur Grammar: Phonology, Morphophonology, and Morphology (1990)
- Arthur Charles Beaton, A grammar of the Fur language (1968)
Japanese
Romanization
koro
- R?maji transcription of ??
Khoekhoe
Numeral
koro
- five
Lindu
Noun
koro
- body
- self
Maori
Noun
koro (used in the form koro-a)
- grandfather
Norwegian Nynorsk
Noun
kòro f
- (non-standard since 1917) definite singular of kòru
Polish
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?k?.r?/
Noun
koro f
- vocative singular of kora
Rapa Nui
Noun
koro
- (archaic) father
Usage notes
Considered archaic; the following are preferred:
- matu'a tamaaroa
- matu'a tane
koro From the web:
- what korok seeds do
- what korotkoff sounds
- what koro means
- what koro sensei taught us
- what koro means in japanese
- korowai meaning
- korosu meaning
- what korokoro meaning
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