Cebuano edit

Etymology edit

From English shellac, from shell +‎ lac, calque translation of French laque (lac) + en (in) + écailles (scales, shells).

Pronunciation edit

  • Hyphenation: se‧lak

Noun edit

selak

  1. shellac; a processed secretion of the lac insect, Coccus lacca; used in polishes, varnishes etc.
  2. (by extension) varnishing; an application of varnish

Quotations edit

For quotations using this term, see Citations:selak.

Indonesian edit

Etymology 1 edit

Inherited from Malay selak, from Classical Malay sila, from Sanskrit शील (śīla, conduct, beauty, form, virtue). Doublet of sila.

Pronunciation edit

Verb edit

selak (base, imperative & colloquial selak, active menyelak, ordinary passive diselak, adversative passive terselak)

  1. to open
    Synonyms: buka, singkap
Derived terms edit

Etymology 2 edit

Borrowed from Hindi सलाख (salākh, iron bar; rod), from Sanskrit शलाका (śalākā).

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

sêlak (plural selak-selak, first-person possessive selakku, second-person possessive selakmu, third-person possessive selaknya)

  1. bar, bolt
Derived terms edit

Etymology 3 edit

Borrowed from Betawi [Term?], from Javanese ꦱꦼꦭꦏ꧀, ꦱꦼꦊꦏ꧀ (selak, selek, on the verge of, about to, literally to be choking), from Old Javanese sĕlĕk, slĕk (literally choke), probably from Proto-Mon-Khmer *cʔə(ə)ʔ ~ *cʔə(ə)k ~ *cʔak (to hiccough, belch) (compare to Khmer ត្អើក (tʼaək, hiccup), Vietnamese nấc (to hiccup).

Pronunciation edit

Verb edit

sêlak (base, imperative & colloquial selak, active menyelak, ordinary passive diselak, adversative passive terselak)

  1. to jump (the queue).
    Synonym: menyelip
  2. to haste
    Synonyms: mendesak, membangatkan, menggesa-gesakan
  3. (dialect) to be choked: having been unable to breathe due to airway obstruction (choking) or strangulation, but usually to the point of pain and discomfort without death.
    Synonym: tersedak
Derived terms edit

Further reading edit

Malay edit

Pronunciation edit

Adjective edit

selak

  1. (Pontianak) greedy