See also: Kanak

French edit

Pronunciation edit

Adjective edit

kanak (feminine kanake, masculine plural kanaks, feminine plural kanakes)

  1. (relational) Kanak

Hawaiian Creole edit

Etymology edit

From Hawaiian kanaka (human, man).

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

kanak

  1. a person of Native Hawaiian descent

Indonesian edit

Etymology edit

From Malay kanak, from Proto-Malayic *anak, from Proto-Malayo-Polynesian *anak, from Proto-Austronesian *aNak.

Noun edit

kanak (first-person possessive kanakku, second-person possessive kanakmu, third-person possessive kanaknya)

  1. child (a daughter or son)

See also edit

Malay edit

Etymology edit

From Proto-Malayic *anak, from Proto-Malayo-Polynesian *anak, from Proto-Austronesian *aNak.

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

kanak (plural kanak-kanak, informal 1st possessive kanakku, 2nd possessive kanakmu, 3rd possessive kanaknya)

  1. child (a daughter or son)
  2. (formal, used in the plural) a child

See also edit

Further reading edit

Sasak edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

From Proto-Malayo-Polynesian *anak, from Proto-Austronesian *aNak.

Noun edit

kanak

  1. Alternative form of anak

Tocharian A edit

Etymology edit

From Proto-Tocharian *kenek (whence Tocharian B kenek), probably borrowed from an Iranian language. Compare Ossetian гӕн (gæn, flax).

Noun edit

kanak

  1. cotton cloth

Wemba-Wemba edit

Noun edit

kanak

  1. heel