mank

See also: Mank

English

Pronunciation

  • Rhymes: -æŋk

Etymology 1

From Middle English manken, from Old English mancian, bemancian (to maim, mutilate), of obscure origin. Cognate with Dutch and Middle Low German mank (lame, defective), Middle High German manc (lack, defect). Perhaps from Latin mancus (maimed, crippled, frail, incomplete), from Proto-Indo-European *mank-, *menk- (maimed, mutilation, torment).

Verb

mank (third-person singular simple present manks, present participle manking, simple past and past participle manked)

  1. (transitive, obsolete) To mutilate.

Etymology 2

Via Polari, from Italian mancare (to be lacking), from Latin mancus (maimed). See above.

Adjective

mank (not comparable)

  1. (Britain, slang, originally Polari) Disgusting, repulsive.
    Synonyms: manky (slang), ming (slang), minging (slang)
    When he eats, he never closes his mouth. It's so mank.

Noun

mank (uncountable)

  1. (Britain, slang, originally Polari) Something that is disgusting or manky.
    The plumber had to get all the mank out of the drain.

Dutch

Etymology

From Middle Dutch manc (a limping or lame person), from Latin mancus (maimed or defective), from Proto-Indo-European *man-ko- (maimed in the hand), from *man-

Pronunciation

  • (file)
  • Rhymes: -ɑŋk

Adjective

mank (comparative manker, superlative mankst)

  1. lame

Inflection

Inflection of mank
uninflected mank
inflected manke
comparative manker
positive comparative superlative
predicative/adverbial mankmankerhet mankst
het mankste
indefinite m./f. sing. mankemankeremankste
n. sing. mankmankermankste
plural mankemankeremankste
definite mankemankeremankste
partitive manksmankers
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