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Kahil Sehgal




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The noun is derived from Middle English eke (“addition, increase, enlargement”), from Old English ēaca, from Proto-Germanic *aukô, from *aukaną (“to increase, add, enlarge”), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *h₂ewg- (“to enlarge, increase”). The English noun is cognate with Old Frisian āka (“addition, increase; bonus”), Old Norse auki (“growth, increase, proliferation”).

The verb is derived partly:

The English verb is cognate with Latin augeō (“to augment, increase; to enlarge, expand, spread; to lengthen; to exaggerate; to enrich; to honour; (figuratively) to exalt, praise”), Old English ēac (“also”), Old Norse auka (“to augment, increase; to add; to exceed, surpass”), Icelandic auka (“to augment, increase to add; to exceed, surpass”), (Danish øge (“to enhance; to increase”), Norwegian Bokmål øke (“to increase”), Norwegian Nynorsk auka (“to increase”), Swedish öka (“to increase”)).

eke (plural ekes)

eke (third-person singular simple present ekes, present participle eking or ekeing, simple past and past participle eked)

From Middle English ek, eek, eke (“also”) , from Old English ēac, ǣc, ēc (“also”), from Proto-West Germanic *auk, from Proto-Germanic *auk (“also, too; furthermore, in addition”), then either:

The English word is cognate with Gothic 𐌰𐌿𐌺 (auk, “also; for, because; but also”), Old Frisian âk, Old High German ouh (“also, as well, too”) (Middle High German ouch, modern German auch (“also, as well, too”)), Old Norse auk (“also; and”) (Danish og (“and”), Swedish och (“and”), ock (“(dated) also, as well as, too”)), Old Saxon ôk, (Dutch ook (“also, too; moreover; either”)), Saterland Frisian ook, uk (“also, too”), West Frisian ek (“also, too”).

eke (not comparable)

Borrowed from a Chuvash-type Turkic language before the times of the Hungarian conquest of the Carpathian Basin (at the turn of the 9th and 10th centuries). Compare the Turkish verb form ek.

eke (plural ekék)

From informal Dutch ikke (standard Dutch ik), from Middle Dutch ic, from Old Dutch ik, from Proto-Germanic *ek, from Proto-Indo-European *éǵh₂. Compare to Afrikaans ek. Doublet of ego.

eke

(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)

eke

eke

eke

From Old Swedish, see ek (“oak”).

eke n

eke

eke

eke


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is eke a valid scrabble word?

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  • Parish's Pub. 1.2 mi. $ Bars.
  • Kep's Sports Bar & Grill. 0.5 mi. $$ Sports Bars, American (Traditional)
  • The Blacksmith. 1.3 mi. $$ Steakhouses, Sandwiches, Bars.
  • Germantown Grille. 4.6 mi.
  • Alpha Bravo. 2.9 mi.
  • Throttle Bar+Grill. 5.5 mi.
  • Meadows Avenue Tap. 5.8 mi.
  • Carrigan's Pub. 5.0 mi.

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What is the best bars in washington il?

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Village nztz blood lab

Nellore, Andhra Pradesh


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Plz guide me the best Blood Lab in Nellore, Andhra Pradesh?


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