dook
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Dook — may refer to: People Bill Dooks, Canadian politician Sam Dook, a member of The Go! Team Other Dook LaRue, an animatronic drummer in The Rock afire Explosion The dooking noise a ferret makes See also Dooks, an aircraft manufacturer in Russia… … Wikipedia
dook — [duk] 1. mod. really bad. (Probably related to duky.) □ No more of your dook ideas! □ This day was really dook! 2. in. to defecate. □ Mom, I gotta dook. □ … Dictionary of American slang and colloquial expressions
dook — I Australian Slang 1. (older slang) hand; 2. (older slang) hand over; give; 3. (older slang) give as a bribe (from British slang; spelling variant of dukes , from rhyming slang Dukes of Yorks = forks fingers, hands) II Scottish Vernacular… … English dialects glossary
dook — n. small wooden plug inserted into masonry providing hold for a nail or screw v. insert a dook into a wall to provide support to a nail or screw … English contemporary dictionary
dook — I. ˈdük Scotland variant of duck II. noun ( s) Etymology: probably from dook (I) : a haulage incline at a mine … Useful english dictionary
dook — /doohk/, n. plug (def. 17). [1800 10; orig. uncert.] * * * … Universalium
Dook — 1. (older slang) hand; 2. (older slang) hand over; give; 3. (older slang) give as a bribe (from British slang; spelling variant of dukes , from rhyming slang Dukes of Yorks = forks fingers, hands) … Dictionary of Australian slang
dook — n 1. a hand, fist. A variation of the better known duke(s). In rustic and working class Australian speech this form survives from archaic British usage. 2. See dukes; duke it; duke on it … Contemporary slang
Dook — Rheiderland / Ostfriesland • Nebel … Plattdeutsch-Hochdeutsch
dook — /duk/ (say doohk) noun (usually plural) → duke2 …