See also: Lake, Lãke, lakë, lakę, and łąkę

English

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Etymology 1

edit
 
A mountain lake.

Arose from a conflation of the form of inherited Middle English lake (small stream of running water, pool, lake) with Middle English lac (lake), from Old French lac (lake) or Latin lacus (lake, basin, tank), see lac. The former, lake (stream, pool, lake), is inherited from Old English lacu (stream, pool, expanse of water, lake), from Proto-West Germanic *laku, from Proto-Germanic *lakō (stream, pool, water aggregation), ultimately derived from Proto-Indo-European *leg- (to leak, drain). It is related to Dutch laak (stream, drainage ditch, pond), German Low German Lake, Laak (drainage, marshland), German Lache (puddle), Icelandic lækur (stream).[1]

Despite their similarity in form and meaning, Old English lacu is not related to English lay (lake), Latin lacus (hollow, lake, pond), Scottish Gaelic loch (lake), Ancient Greek λάκκος (lákkos, waterhole, tank, pond, pit), all from Proto-Indo-European *lókus, *l̥kwés (lake, pool).[2]

Noun

edit

lake (plural lakes)

  1. A large, landlocked stretch of water or similar liquid.
    • 1897 December (indicated as 1898), Winston Churchill, chapter IV, in The Celebrity: An Episode, New York, N.Y.: The Macmillan Company; London: Macmillan & Co., Ltd., →OCLC:
      Judge Short had gone to town, and Farrar was off for a three days' cruise up the lake. I was bitterly regretting I had not gone with him when the distant notes of a coach horn reached my ear, and I descried a four-in-hand winding its way up the inn road from the direction of Mohair.
    • 2015 July 31, “Morphologically Cryptic Amphipod Species Are “Ecological Clones” at Regional but Not at Local Scale: A Case Study of Four Niphargus Species”, in PLOS ONE[6], →DOI:
      These included other Niphargus species from deep cave lakes and coastal anchihaline caves [23 ] and Gammarus and Echinogammarus amphipods that live only in permanently watered streams [21 ,24 ].
  2. A large amount of liquid; as, a wine lake.
    • 1991, Robert DeNiro (actor), Backdraft:
      So you punched out a window for ventilation. Was that before or after you noticed you were standing in a lake of gasoline?
  3. (now chiefly dialectal) A small stream of running water; a channel for water; a drain.
  4. (obsolete) A pit, or ditch.
Usage notes
edit
  • As with the names of rivers, mounts and mountains, the names of lakes are typically formed by adding the word before or after the unique term: Lake Titicaca or Great Slave Lake. Generally speaking, names formed using adjectives or attributives see lake added to the end, as with Reindeer Lake; lake is usually added before proper names, as with Lake Michigan. This derives from the earlier but now uncommon form lake of ~: for instance, the 19th-century Lake of Annecy is now usually simply Lake Annecy. There are exceptions to this generalization, however, including notably the names of the individual Finger Lakes (e.g. Oneida Lake, Seneca Lake, Cayuga Lake). It frequently occurs, however, that foreign placenames are misunderstood as proper nouns, as with the Chinese Taihu (Great Lake) and Qinghai (Blue Sea) being frequently rendered as Lake Tai and Qinghai Lake.
Synonyms
edit
Derived terms
edit
edit
Translations
edit

See also

edit

Further reading

edit
  •   lake on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
  • Astell, Ann W. (1999) Political Allegory in Late Medieval England, Cornell University Press, →ISBN, page 192.
  • Cameron, Kenneth (1961) English Place Names, B. T. Batsford Limited, →ISBN, page 164.
  • Ferguson, Robert (1858) English Surnames: And their Place in the Teutonic Family, G. Routledge & Co., page 368.
  • Maetzner, Eduard Adolf Ferdinand (2009) An English Grammar; Methodical, Analytical, and Historical, BiblioBazaar, LLC, →ISBN, page 200.
  • Rissanen, Matti (1992) History of Englishes: New Methods and Interpretations in Historical Linguistics, Walter de Gruyter, →ISBN, pages 513–514.
  • Sisam, Kenneth (2009) Fourteenth Century Verse and Prose, BiblioBazaar, →ISBN.

Etymology 2

edit

From Northern Middle English lake, lak, lac (also laik, layke; Southern loke), from Old English lāc (play, sport, strife, battle, sacrifice, offering, gift, present, booty, message), from Proto-West Germanic *laik, from Proto-Germanic *laikaz (game, dance, hymn, sport), from Proto-Indo-European *leyg- (to bounce, shake, tremble). Cognate with Old High German leih (song, melody, music), Old Norse leikr (whence Danish leg (game), Swedish leka (to play)), and Gothic 𐌻𐌰𐌹𐌺𐍃 (laiks, dance); Doublet of lek.

Verb form partly from Middle English laken, from Old English lacan, from Proto-Germanic *laikaną, from Proto-Indo-European *leyg-. More at lay, -lock.

Alternative forms

edit

Noun

edit
 
English Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia

lake (plural lakes)

  1. (obsolete) An offering, sacrifice, gift.
  2. (dialectal) Play; sport; game; fun; glee.
edit

Verb

edit

lake (third-person singular simple present lakes, present participle laking, simple past and past participle laked)

  1. (obsolete) To present an offering.
  2. (dialectal, Northern, UK) To leap, jump, exert oneself, play.
  3. Subject biological cells to repeated cycles of freezing and thawing until lysis.

Etymology 3

edit

From Middle English lake, from Old English *lacen or Middle Dutch laken; both from Proto-Germanic *lakaną (linen; cloth; sheet). Cognate with Dutch lake (linen), Dutch laken (linen; bedsheet), German Laken, Danish lagan, Swedish lakan, Icelandic lak, lakan.

Noun

edit

lake (plural lakes)

  1. (obsolete) A kind of fine, white linen.

Etymology 4

edit

From French laque (lacquer), from Persian لاک (lâk), from Hindi लाख (lākh), from Sanskrit लाक्षा (lākṣā). Doublet of lac and lacquer.

Noun

edit

lake (plural lakes)

  1. In dyeing and painting, an often fugitive crimson or vermilion pigment derived from an organic colorant (cochineal or madder, for example) and an inorganic, generally metallic mordant.
    Synonym: lac
    • 1997, Thomas Pynchon, chapter 24, in Mason & Dixon, 1st US edition, New York: Henry Holt and Company, →ISBN, part One: Latitudes and Departures, page 242:
      Jeremiah found himself indoors, perfecting his Draftsmanship, bending all day over the work-table, grinding and mixing his own Inks,— siftings and splashes ev'rywhere of King's Yellow, Azure, red Orpiment, Indian lake, Verdigris, Indigo, and Umber.
  2. In the composition of colors for use in products intended for human consumption, made by extending on a substratum of alumina, a salt prepared from one of the certified water-soluble straight colors.
    The name of a lake prepared by extending the aluminum salt prepared from FD&C Blue No. 1 upon the substratum would be FD&C Blue No. 1--Aluminum Lake.
Derived terms
edit
Translations
edit

Verb

edit

lake (third-person singular simple present lakes, present participle laking, simple past and past participle laked)

  1. To make lake-red.

References

edit
  1. ^ lake, n.3.”, in OED Online  , Oxford: Oxford University Press, September 2021.
  2. ^ Guus Kroonen (2013) “Lagu-”, in Alexander Lubotsky, editor, Etymological Dictionary of Proto-Germanic (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 11)‎[1], Leiden, Boston: Brill, →ISBN

Anagrams

edit

Dutch

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Verb

edit

lake

  1. (dated or formal) singular present subjunctive of laken

Anagrams

edit

Mauritian Creole

edit

Etymology

edit

From French queue.

Noun

edit

lake

  1. tail
  2. queue

References

edit
  • Baker, Philip & Hookoomsing, Vinesh Y. 1987. Dictionnaire de créole mauricien. Morisyen – English – Français

Norwegian Bokmål

edit
 
Norwegian Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia no

Etymology 1

edit

From Low German lake.

Noun

edit

lake m (definite singular laken, indefinite plural laker, definite plural lakene)

  1. (preservative) pickle, brine

Etymology 2

edit
 
Norwegian Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia no

From Old Norse laki.

Noun

edit

lake m (definite singular laken, indefinite plural laker, definite plural lakene)

  1. (fish) burbot, eelpout (species Lota lota)

Etymology 3

edit

As for Etymology 1.

Verb

edit

lake

  1. to pickle, put in brine

References

edit

Norwegian Nynorsk

edit
 
Norwegian Nynorsk Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia nn

Etymology 1

edit

From Low German lake.

Noun

edit

lake m (definite singular laken, indefinite plural lakar, definite plural lakane)

  1. (preservative) pickle, brine

Etymology 2

edit
 
Norwegian Nynorsk Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia nn

From Old Norse laki.

Noun

edit

lake m (definite singular laken, indefinite plural lakar, definite plural lakane)

  1. (fish) burbot, eelpout (species Lota lota)

Etymology 3

edit

As for Etymology 1.

Verb

edit

lake

  1. to pickle, put in brine

References

edit

Serbo-Croatian

edit

Adjective

edit

lake

  1. inflection of lak:
    1. masculine accusative plural
    2. feminine genitive singular
    3. feminine nominative/accusative/vocative plural

Seychellois Creole

edit

Etymology

edit

From French queue.

Noun

edit

lake

  1. tail
  2. queue

References

edit
  • Danielle D’Offay et Guy Lionnet, Diksyonner Kreol - Franse / Dictionnaire Créole Seychellois - Français

Swahili

edit

Adjective

edit

lake

  1. Ji class inflected form of -ake.

Swedish

edit

Etymology 1

edit

Borrowed from Middle Low German lâke (brine; standing water), from Old Saxon *laca, from Proto-West Germanic *laku (steam, pool).[1][2]

Noun

edit

lake c

  1. brine
Declension
edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Hellquist, Elof (1922) “1. lake”, in Svensk etymologisk ordbok [Swedish etymological dictionary]‎[2] (in Swedish), Lund: C. W. K. Gleerups förlag, page 394
  2. ^ lake”, in Svenska Akademiens ordbok [Dictionary of the Swedish Academy][3] (in Swedish), 1937

Etymology 2

edit
 
Swedish Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia sv

From Old Norse laki.[1][2]

Noun

edit

lake c

  1. burbot (Lota lota spp.)
    Synonym: (colloquial) slemhelge
Declension
edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Hellquist, Elof (1922) “2. lake”, in Svensk etymologisk ordbok [Swedish etymological dictionary]‎[4] (in Swedish), Lund: C. W. K. Gleerups förlag, pages 394-395
  2. ^ lake”, in Svenska Akademiens ordbok [Dictionary of the Swedish Academy][5] (in Swedish), 1937

Anagrams

edit

Turkish

edit

Etymology

edit

From French laqué.[1]

Pronunciation

edit
  • IPA(key): /ˈla.ce/
  • Hyphenation: la‧ke

Adjective

edit

lake

  1. Polished with lacquer.

Declension

edit
edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Nişanyan, Sevan (2002–) “lake”, in Nişanyan Sözlük

Further reading

edit