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See also: Kook and köök

English

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Etymology

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Possibly from cuckoo

Pronunciation

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Noun

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kook (plural kooks)

  1. (slang, chiefly US) An eccentric, strange or crazy person.
    Synonyms: nutjob, odd duck, weirdo; see also Thesaurus:mad person, Thesaurus:strange person
    • 2019 January 29, Tom Bissell, “An Anti-Facebook Manifesto”, in New York Times[1]:
      The kook we will always have with us, to paraphrase Jesus, but the kooks of yore had to work to maintain their kookery and locate fellow kooks. They had to pick up their kook phone, subscribe to the kook newsletter, drive to the kook convention. Nowadays, all the kook has to do is log in to Facebook, where his feed will be enlivened by the chatter of fellow — and likely more extreme — kooks, toward which Facebook’s algorithms helpfully steer him.
  2. (surfing, kiteboarding, wakeboarding) A boardsport participant who lacks style or skill; a newbie who acts as if they are better at the sport than they are.

Derived terms

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Translations

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Anagrams

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Dutch

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Pronunciation

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Verb

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kook

  1. inflection of koken:
    1. first-person singular present indicative
    2. (in case of inversion) second-person singular present indicative
    3. imperative

Estonian

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Etymology

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From Middle Low German kôke.

Noun

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kook (genitive koogi, partitive kooki)

  1. cake
    Synonyms: tort, keeks

Declension

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Declension of kook (ÕS type 22e/riik, k-g gradation)
singular plural
nominative kook koogid
accusative nom.
gen. koogi
genitive kookide
partitive kooki kooke
kookisid
illative kooki
koogisse
kookidesse
koogesse
inessive koogis kookides
kooges
elative koogist kookidest
koogest
allative koogile kookidele
koogele
adessive koogil kookidel
koogel
ablative koogilt kookidelt
koogelt
translative koogiks kookideks
koogeks
terminative koogini kookideni
essive koogina kookidena
abessive koogita kookideta
comitative koogiga kookidega