skop - Wiktionary, the free dictionary (original) (raw)

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

From Dutch schoppen.

skop (present **skop, present participle skopende, past participle geskop)

  1. to kick

Borrowed from Dutch schop (“shovel, spade”), from Middle Dutch schoppe, from Old Dutch *skuppa, from Proto-Germanic *skupjō. Cognate of Indonesian sekop.

skop

  1. shovel, spade

Borrowed from Dutch schop (“to kick”), from Middle Dutch schuppen (“to shove away”), from Proto-Germanic *skuppōną.

skop

  1. kick (strike with or raise the foot or leg)

skop

  1. second-person singular imperative of skopat
    Synonym: skopej

From Old Norse skop.

skop n (genitive singular skops, no plural)

  1. humour, jest
  2. mockery, ridicule

From English scope, from Italian scopo (“purpose”), from Latin scopus (“target”), from Ancient Greek σκοπός (skopós), from σκέπτομαι (sképtomai), from Proto-Indo-European *speḱ-.

skop (plural **skop-skop)

  1. scope
    1. the breadth, depth or reach of a subject; a domain
      Synonyms: cakupan, jangkauan, ruang lingkup
  2. (colloquial) field
    Synonym: lapangan

Borrowed from Italian scopo.

skop m (plural skopijiet)

  1. aim, end, goal

Borrowed from Dutch schoppen (“to kick”), from Middle Dutch schuppen (“to shove away”), from Proto-Germanic *skuppōną.

skop

  1. kick (strike with or raise the foot or leg)

Inherited from Proto-Slavic *skopъ.

skop m animal (diminutive skopek or (dialectal) szkopik)

  1. wether (castrated ram)

See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.

skop

  1. second-person singular imperative of skopać

skop

  1. second-person singular imperative of skopić