aks
English
Etymology
Old English axian (“ask”); see ax for more.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /æks/, /ɑːks/
- Rhymes: -æks, -ɑːks
Verb
aks (third-person singular simple present aks or akses, present participle aksing, simple past and past participle aksed)
- (dialectal, now chiefly West Africa, African-American Vernacular, MLE and Irish English) To ask.
- 1865, William Stott Banks, A List of Provincial Words in Use at Wakefield in Yorkshire, London: J.R.Smith, page 3:
- AKS, ask.
- 2004, Larry Dean Hamilton, A Gathering of Angels, page 132:
- Another thing, kid, don't aks me no more questions tonight.
-
Dutch
Alternative forms
- aaks (dated)
- akst (archaic, literary)
Etymology
From Middle Dutch aex, from Old Dutch *acus.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ɑks/
Audio (file) - Hyphenation: aks
- Rhymes: -ɑks
Jamaican Creole
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈɑːks/, /ˈɔːks/
- Hyphenation: aks
Verb
aks
- ask
- 2013, Loron-Jon Stokes, Citizen Class 5, →ISBN, page 267:
- “"Mi cyan gi'e teh yeh deh t'ings yeh aks fuh [...]”
- I can't give you the things you've asked for.
- Aks Teddy ef 'im a guh a farin nex' week.
- Ask Teddy if he's going to the USA next week.
-
Further reading
- Richard Allsopp, editor, Dictionary of Caribbean English Usage, Kingston, Jamaica: University of the West Indies Press, 1996 (2003 printing), →ISBN, page 20
Tsimshian
FWOTD – 17 July 2015
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [ʔaks]
References
- John Asher Dunn, Sm'algyax: A Reference Dictionary and Grammar (1995, →ISBN
Turkish
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ɑks/
Westrobothnian
Etymology 1
From Old Norse ax, from Proto-Germanic *ahsą.
Noun
aks n (definite aks’e, definite plural aks’a)
Derived terms
References
- Lindgren, J. V., “ax n., aktie n.”, in Orbok över Burträskmålet, page 7, 2
- Fältskytt, Gunnar, 2007, Ordbok över Lövångersmålet, →ISBN, →ISBN, page 159
- Marklund, Thorsten, 1986, Skelleftemålet: grammatik och ordlista : för lekmän - av lekman [The Skellefteå speech: grammar and vocabulary: for laymen - by a layman], →ISBN, page 206
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