suki

See also: sukí and sukī

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Tagalog suki, from Hokkien 主客 (chú-kheh, guest of honour).

Noun

suki (plural sukis)

  1. In some Asian cultures, a favored customer, a regular who receives preferential treatment.
    • 1973, William G. Davis, Social Relations in a Philippine Market: Self-interest and Subjectivity, →ISBN, page 230:
      Near the opposite end of the suki continuum, the "subjective" pole, are special suki.
    • 2007, Isabel S. Panopio, & Realidad Santico Rolda, Society & Culture, →ISBN, page 216:
      Frequent buyers in a particular store become the suki, so that with this kind of a relationship, the marketgoer gets an extra treat, like obtaining more tomatoes for the price of a kilo.
    • 2011, Robert S. Pomeroy & Neil Andrew, Small-scale Fisheries Management, →ISBN, page 169:
      The suki relationship in the Philippines, a credit/marketing linkage, is often assumed to be exploitative of the fisher.
  2. (martial arts) An opening to the enemy; a weak spot that provides an advantage for one's opponent.
    • 1959, Daisetz Teitarō Suzuki, Zen and Japanese culture, page 143:
      This gluing is "stoppage," and every stoppage means giving an advantage to the enemy, which is a suki.
    • 1997, Hiroshi Ozawa, Kendo: The Definitive Guide, →ISBN, page 20:
      When you receive a strike, it is because there is a suki. Your opponent draws your attention to your weak spots, and you endeavor to ensure that you do not receive a strike in the same place again.
    • 2006, Kevin L. Seiler & Donald J. Seller, Karate-do, →ISBN, page 61:
      Often, though, a suki to the chest will cause the sword to become lodged between bone and cartilage making it very difficult to quickly remove.

Bikol Central

Pronunciation

  • Hyphenation: su‧ki
  • IPA(key): /ˈsukiʔ/

Etymology 1

From Hokkien 主客 (chú-kheh, “important customer”).

Noun

sukì

  1. a favored customer, a regular who receives preferential treatment
  2. a favorite seller or vendor
Derived terms
  • kasuki

Noun

sukì

  1. swerve; veer; turn
    Synonyms: siko, kurba, liko
Derived terms
  • magsuki

Cebuano

Etymology 1

From Hokkien 主客 (chú-kheh, “important customer”).

Noun

suki

  1. a favored customer, a regular who receives preferential treatment
  2. a favorite seller or vendor

Etymology 2

Compare sukol.

Verb

suki

  1. to go against; to oppose; to resist
  2. to disobey

Finnish

Verb

suki

  1. third-person singular past indicative of sukia

Anagrams


Ido

Noun

suki

  1. plural of suko

Japanese

Romanization

suki

  1. Rōmaji transcription of すき

Polish

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈsu.ki/
  • Rhymes: -uki
  • Syllabification: su‧ki

Noun

suki

  1. inflection of suka:
    1. genitive singular
    2. nominative/accusative/vocative plural

Tagalog

Pronunciation

  • Hyphenation: su‧ki
  • IPA(key): /ˈsukiʔ/, [ˈsu.xɪʔ]

Etymology 1

Borrowed from Hokkien 主客 (chú-kheh, guest of honour), as per Chan-Yap (1980).[1] Compare Bikol Central and Cebuano suki.

Noun

sukì (Baybayin spelling ᜐᜓᜃᜒ)

  1. (business) regular and long-standing customer or client (who may receive special treatment due to patronage)
  2. (business, dialectal) regular vendor or dealer (which one buys from)
Alternative forms
See also

Noun

sukì (Baybayin spelling ᜐᜓᜃᜒ)

  1. (obsolete) cross-like support or prop placed inside houses
  2. (obsolete) act of propping up or shoring up (something)
Alternative forms
Derived terms
  • isuki
  • magsuki
  • sukian
See also

References

  1. Chan-Yap, Gloria (1980), “Hokkien Chinese borrowings in Tagalog”, in Pacific Linguistics (PDF), volume B, issue 71, Canberra, A.C.T. 2600.: The Australian National University, page 145.
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