gaki

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Japanese 餓鬼 (gaki).

Noun

gaki (plural gaki)

  1. A restless ghost in Japanese mythology.

Anagrams

Acehnese

Noun

gaki

  1. (anatomy) leg
  2. (anatomy) foot

References

Esperanto

Etymology

From German gackern.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈɡaki/
  • Rhymes: -aki
  • Hyphenation: ga‧ki

Verb

gaki (present gakas, past gakis, future gakos, conditional gakus, volitive gaku)

  1. to cackle, cluck (make the characteristic sound of a goose, chicken, etc.)

Conjugation

Conjugation of gaki
present past future
singular plural singular plural singular plural
tense gakas gakis gakos
active participle gakanta gakantaj gakinta gakintaj gakonta gakontaj
acc. gakantan gakantajn gakintan gakintajn gakontan gakontajn
nominal active participle gakanto gakantoj gakinto gakintoj gakonto gakontoj
acc. gakanton gakantojn gakinton gakintojn gakonton gakontojn
adverbial active participle gakante gakinte gakonte
infinitive gaki imperative gaku conditional gakus

Japanese

Romanization

gaki

  1. Rōmaji transcription of がき
  2. Rōmaji transcription of ガキ