deck
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Middle English dekke, borrowed from Middle Dutch dec (“roof, covering”), from Middle Dutch decken, from Old Dutch thecken, from Proto-West Germanic *þakkjan, from Proto-Germanic *þakjaną. Formed the same: German Decke (“covering, blanket”). Doublet of thatch and thack.
deck (plural decks)
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deck (third-person singular simple present decks, present participle decking, simple past and past participle decked)
From Middle English dekken, from Middle Dutch dekken (“to cover”), from Old Dutch thecken, from Proto-West Germanic *þakkjan, from Proto-Germanic *þakjaną (“to roof; cover”).
deck (third-person singular simple present decks, present participle decking, simple past and past participle decked)
From Middle High German dicke, from Proto-Germanic *þekuz.
deck (masculine decke, feminine and plural decke or deck, comparative decker, superlative et deckste)
deck (comparative decker, superlative et decks)
See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.
deck
deck m (plural decks)
deck m (plural decks)
deck
Unadapted borrowing from English deck.
deck m (invariable)
deck
deck n (plural deckuri)
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