different between yeke vs seke
yeke
English
Alternative forms
- yek
Etymology
From Middle English ?ek, ?eac, from Old English ??ac (“cuckoo, gawk”), from Proto-Germanic *gaukaz (“cuckoo”), from Proto-Indo-European *g?Au?-, *g?eg?Au?- (“cuckoo”). Cognate with Scots gowk (“cuckoo”), German Gauch (“cuckoo”), Danish gøg (“cuckoo”), Swedish gök (“cuckoo”). See also gawk, gowk.
Noun
yeke (plural yekes)
- (Britain dialectal) A cuckoo.
Anagrams
- yeek
yeke From the web:
seke
English
Verb
seke
- Archaic spelling of seek.
- a. 1542, Sir Thomas Wyatt:
- They fle from me that sometyme did me seke.
- a. 1542, Sir Thomas Wyatt:
Anagrams
- Seek, eeks, ekes, kees, seek, skee
Esperanto
Adverb
seke
- dryly
Middle English
Verb
seke (third-person singular simple present seketh, present participle sekende, first-/third-person singular past indicative and past participle sought)
- Alternative form of seken
seke From the web:
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