kolk
English
Etymology 1
Noun
kolk (plural kolks)
- (geology) An underwater vortex similar to a whirlwind, capable of dislodging, picking up, and moving boulders.
Etymology 2
Borrowed from Low German Kolk, possibly via German Kolk. Cognate with Dutch kolk.
Noun
kolk (plural kolks)
- A relatively small water-filled depression, especially in a bog: a bog pond, a bog eye, a bog kolk.
- 1988 July 29, Heinz Ellenberg, Vegetation Ecology of Central Europe, Cambridge University Press, →ISBN, page 341:
- […] bogs, but only around pools or kolks. The small-scale mosaic of hummocks and hollows so characteristic of the true raised bog is nowhere to be found on a wooded bog. The quaking bog community on the kolk edge, similar to that […]
- 1998, R. S. Ambasht, Modern Trends in Ecology and Environment:
- […] bog hollows and kolks.
Dutch
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /kɔlk/
Audio: (file) - Hyphenation: kolk
- Rhymes: -ɔlk
Etymology 1
From Middle Dutch colc, from Old Dutch *kolk, from Proto-West Germanic *kolk (“hollow, pit, gully”), from Proto-Germanic *kulukaz, an extension of *kelǭ (“throat”).
Noun
kolk f or m (plural kolken, diminutive kolkje n)
- vortex, maelstrom
- Synonym: draaikolk
- a drain that is part a sewer system
- Synonym: put
- a small waterway connected to one or several windmills that control the water level in a polder, serving as a conduit to remove surplus water
- Synonyms: boezemsloot, kolksloot, molenkolk
- a dyke beside such a waterway
- Synonyms: kolkdijk, molenkolk
- a stagnant pool or lake resulting from the vortex of e.g. a breached dyke
- the body of water between sluice gates
- Synonym: sluiskolk
- a dug watering hole
Hypernyms
Derived terms
- draaikolk
- kolkdijk
- kolksloot
- molenkolk
- rioolkolk
- sluiskolk
- straatkolk
Descendants
- → Afrikaans: kolk
Etymology 2
See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.
Verb
kolk
- inflection of kolken:
- first-person singular present indicative
- (in case of inversion) second-person singular present indicative
- imperative