oki
Alabama edit
Etymology edit
Cognate with Choctaw oka (“water”), Koasati okí.
Noun edit
oki
References edit
- Indian Place Names in Alabama (1984, →ISBN, page 12: "the source of this name is Alabama oki, “water,” […] "
French edit
Alternative forms edit
Pronunciation edit
Interjection edit
oki
Fuyug edit
Noun edit
oki
References edit
- Robert L. Bradshaw, Fuyug grammar sketch (2007)
Hawaiian edit
Etymology edit
From Proto-Polynesian *qoti, from Proto-Oceanic *qoti, from Proto-Malayo-Polynesian *qəti, from Proto-Austronesian *qəCi.
Pronunciation edit
Verb edit
oki
Derived terms edit
References edit
- Pukui, Mary Kawena, Elbert, Samuel H. (1986) “oki”, in Hawaiian Dictionary, Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press
Hitchiti edit
Etymology edit
Cognate with Alabama oki (“water”), Choctaw oka (“water”), which see for more.
Noun edit
oki
Alternative forms edit
Further reading edit
- Thomas Noxon Toomey, Analysis of a Text in the Apalachi Language (1917) (has notes on Hitchiti)
Icelandic edit
Noun edit
oki
Karao edit
Noun edit
oki
- sleep (rheum or gummy discharge found in the eye)
Koasati edit
Etymology edit
Noun edit
okí
References edit
- Geoffrey D. Kimball's 1994 Koasati Dictionary (ISBN: 0803227264)
Maori edit
Noun edit
oki (used in a reduplicated form as okioki)
Mikasuki edit
Noun edit
oki
References edit
- Publications of the Alabama Historical Society (1901), page 405: [a certain placename] "signifies "bubbling, boiling water" from Hitchiti oki water;"
Serbo-Croatian edit
Noun edit
oki
Volapük edit
Pronoun edit
oki
- (accusative singular of ok) himself, herself