Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

rawk

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

Remove ads

English

Etymology 1

Related to roke (mist; smoke), Swedish rök (smoke). Compare raggy (foggy).

Noun

rawk (plural rawks)

  1. (Yorkshire) A thick fog.
    • a. 1854, Clare, manuscript poems, quoted in 1854, Anne Elizabeth Baker, Glossary of Northamptonshire Words and Phrases, page 163:
      The rawk o' the hills, and the mist o' the mountains, / Like the reek o'a pot, and the smoke of a kiln, / Draws further off still, while the round sun is counting / His pulses o' light o' the morning so still.
Derived terms

Etymology 2

Compare roke (defect in steel).

Noun

rawk (plural rawks)

  1. (UK, dialectal, possibly obsolete) A mark.
    • 1865, William Stott Banks, Wakefield Words:
      Rawks o' muck dahn't side on his faace.
    • 1896 June 27, Yorkshire Weekly Post:
      'At drew all them rawks.
    • 1943, Textile Colorist: A Monthly Journal Devoted to Practical Dyeing, Bleaching, Printing and Finishing, Dyes, Dyestuffs and Chemicals as Applied to Dyeing, volume 65, page 241:
      When the piece is on shade, cool down gradually and thoroughly to avoid “rawks []

Etymology 3

Noun

rawk (uncountable)

  1. Pronunciation spelling of rock (music genre).
    I enjoy listening to good rawk.
    • [2005 May, Chuck Klosterman, “The Rock Lexicon”, in SPIN, page 61:
      RAWK: This is how people who start bands in order to meet porn stars spell rock.]

Verb

rawk (third-person singular simple present rawks, present participle rawking, simple past and past participle rawked)

  1. Pronunciation spelling of rock.
    What do ya think 'bout it? It rawks!

Anagrams

Remove ads

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads