- Sook
Sook, Dorf, so v.w. Sok.
Pierer's Lexicon. 1857–1865.
Sook, Dorf, so v.w. Sok.
Pierer's Lexicon. 1857–1865.
Sook — may refer to: * Glynko da Sook, powerlifter * Hoon Sook Pak, ballerina * Moon Nam Sook, Korean voice actor * Ryan Sook, comic book artist * Suki Low Sook Yee, winner in the One in a Million competition * Yoo Eun Sook, Korean voice actoree also*… … Wikipedia
Sook — steht für: T sou ke, eine der kanadischen First Nations ein kommerzielles Viertel in einer arabischen Stadt, siehe Suq Sook ist der Name folgender Personen: Oleg Sook (* 1965), ukrainischer Rockmusiker Ryan Sook, US amerikanischer Comiczeichner … Deutsch Wikipedia
sook — /sook/, n. 1. Australia and New Zealand. a timid, cowardly person, esp. a young person; crybaby. interj. 2. Midland U.S. (used to summon cows from the pasture). [1890 95; prob. from earlier sense calf reared by hand, perh. suck( calf), with sp.… … Universalium
sook — variant of SOUK (Cf. souk) … Etymology dictionary
sook — [so͞ok] n. alt. sp. of SOUK … English World dictionary
sook — I Australian Slang a person or animal who is soft, tame, inoffensive; a cry baby someone who is likely to burst into tears with minimal provocation II Scottish Vernacular Dictionary To suck When the weans hud sooked aw the orange colour oot thur… … English dialects glossary
sook — nain·sook; sook; sook·ie; … English syllables
sook — /sʊk / (say sook) Colloquial –noun 1. Also, sookie. a poddy calf. 2. (usually with children) a timid, shy, cowardly person; a cry baby: *The teacher watched him walk away and thought, hating himself for it: cry baby, sook, bellowing big calf of a …
sook — 1. noun /suːk, sʊk/ a) Familiar name for a calf. Dont be such a sook. b) Familiar name for a cow. I was so upset that I went home and had a sook about it. 2. interjection /suːk, sʊk/ a) A call for calves … Wiktionary
sook — kindly description of someone who is being silly, or behaving like a softy or scaredy cat. As in: you re being a sook ... just a big sook and so on... More often than not the phrase is used as a term of endearment. Suggested by Pam … Kiwi (New Zealand slang)