See also: Fyke

English

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Three fykes at the Zuiderzeemuseum

Etymology

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Borrowed from Dutch fuik (fish trap), from Middle Dutch vuyke, fuke. Cognate with West Frisian fûke, German Low German Fuuk.

Noun

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fyke (plural fykes)

  1. (fishing) A type of fish-trap consisting of tubular nets that are supported by hoops.
    Synonyms: fyke net, fyke-net

Translations

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Verb

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fyke (third-person singular simple present fykes, present participle fyking, simple past and past participle fyked)

  1. (transitive, intransitive) To fish using a fyke.

See also

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Middle English

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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fyke

Inherited from Old English fīc, from Vulgar Latin *fīca, from Latin fīcus. Doublet of fige.

Pronunciation

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Noun

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fyke (plural fykes)

  1. A fig (fruit of a fig tree)

Descendants

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  • English: fike

References

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Norwegian Nynorsk

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Verb

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fyke (present tense fyk, past tense fauk, supine foke, past participle foken, present participle fykande, imperative fyk)

  1. Alternative form of fyka