jako

See also: Jáko, jakō, and Jâko

English

A jako.

Etymology

Noun

jako (plural jakos)

  1. An African gray parrot, Psittacus erithacus, commonly kept as a cage bird.
    • 1878, Jules Verne, Dick Sand: A Captain at Fifteen:
      Of parrots, little Jack only saw ash-gray jakos, with red tails, which abounded under the trees. But these jakos were not new to him.
    • 1882, Rev. P. B. Power, The Home Visitor and District Companion
      Very little is known of these birds in their wild state, although they are brought to Europe in far greater numbers than any other species. We learn from Henglin that the habitat of the Jako extends from the western coast of Africa deep into the heart of that continent []
    • 1908, Chandler Belden Beach, The Students' Reference Work
      The Jako, or gray parrot of Africa, has the capacity for speaking best developed, and the yellow-headed green parrot of Mexico stands second in the list.

Czech

Etymology

From Proto-Slavic *jako.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈjako/
  • (file)
  • Rhymes: -ako

Adverb

jako

  1. as
  2. like

References


    Esperanto

    Etymology

    Borrowed from German Jacke.

    Pronunciation

    • IPA(key): /ˈjako/
    • Hyphenation: ja‧ko
    • Rhymes: -ako

    Noun

    jako (accusative singular jakon, plural jakoj, accusative plural jakojn)

    1. jacket, coat

    Derived terms


    Finnish

    Etymology

    From Proto-Finnic *jako, from *jakadak. Equivalent to jak- + -o.

    Noun

    jako

    1. The act of dividing, sharing or dealing (See various meanings of the verb jakaa).
    2. The result of the same activities.

    Declension

    Inflection of jako (Kotus type 1/valo, k- gradation)
    nominative jako jaot
    genitive jaon jakojen
    partitive jakoa jakoja
    illative jakoon jakoihin
    singular plural
    nominative jako jaot
    accusative nom. jako jaot
    gen. jaon
    genitive jaon jakojen
    partitive jakoa jakoja
    inessive jaossa jaoissa
    elative jaosta jaoista
    illative jakoon jakoihin
    adessive jaolla jaoilla
    ablative jaolta jaoilta
    allative jaolle jaoille
    essive jakona jakoina
    translative jaoksi jaoiksi
    instructive jaoin
    abessive jaotta jaoitta
    comitative jakoineen

    Derived terms

    Anagrams


    Ido

    Etymology

    Modern and unofficial back-formation from jaketo. Also found in German Jacke, Italian giacca.

    Pronunciation

    • IPA(key): /ˈʒako/, /ˈd͡ʒako/

    Noun

    jako (plural jaki)

    1. jacket (long woman’s)

    Ingrian

    Etymology

    From *jako.

    Noun

    jako

    1. deal

    Polish

    Etymology

    From Proto-Slavic *jako.

    Pronunciation

    • IPA(key): /ˈja.kɔ/
    • (file)

    Preposition

    jako (+ same case as that of the noun it modifies)

    1. as

    Conjunction

    jako

    1. as

    Further reading

    • jako in Polish dictionaries at PWN

    Serbo-Croatian

    Etymology

    From Proto-Slavic *jako. Synchronically analysable as jȃk (strong) + -o.

    Pronunciation

    • IPA(key): /jâːko/
    • Hyphenation: ja‧ko

    Adverb

    jȃko (Cyrillic spelling ја̑ко)

    1. very, very much
      D(j)eca se često poskliznu i padnu kad uče hodati, ali se nikad jako ne ozl(j)ede.
      Children often slip and fall when they are learning to walk, but they do not hurt themselves very much.
    2. hard, strongly, powerfully, forcefully (with a great deal of effort or force)
      U borilačkim sportovima, prejako udaranje suparnika može rezultirati diskvalificiranjem.
      In martial arts, hitting the opponent too hard can result in disqualification.
    3. hard, severely (to the fullest extent possible)
      Auto je skrenuo jako udesno te skliznuo sa ceste.
      Car turned hard to the right and skidded off the road.
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