- Proto-Sino-Tibetan: *dəkw (Coblin, 1986)
- Proto-Tibeto-Burman: *duk ⪤ *tuk (Matisoff, STEDT; Benedict, 1972; Chou, 1972)
*duk ~ tuk
- poison; poisonous, toxic; to poison
- Old Chinese: 毒 /*dˤuk/ (“poison”), /*m-dˤuk-s/ (“to poison”) (B-S); /*duːɡ/ (PW)
The template Template:Sinoxenic does not use the parameter(s): 5=dok
Please see Module:checkparams for help with this warning.**:
→ Japanese: 毒 (どく, doku)
Korean: 독 (毒, dok)
Vietnamese: độc (毒)
→ Vietnamese: nọc (“venom, poison”) (?)
- Mandarin:
- Cantonese:
- Guangzhou-Hong Kong: 毒 (duk6) /tʊk̚²/
- Wu:
- Shanghainese: 毒 /d̻ʊ̆ʔ¹²/
- Min:
- Coastal Min:
- Min Nan:
- Hokkien:
- Taiwan: 毒 /tʰaʊ³³/ (colloquial) (“to poison”), /tok̚⁵/ (literary) (“toxin, toxic”)
- Himalayish
- Tibeto-Kanauri
- Bodic
- Tibetan
- Written Tibetan: དུག (dug, “poison, toxin”), གདུག (gdug) / གདུག་པ (gdug pa, “vicious, evil, harmful, poisonous”)
- Modern Tibetan (Lhasa): /tʰuʔ˩˧˨/ ("poison")
- Lepcha: ᰌᰨᰭ (dok, “ill”) (?)
- Tangut-Qiang
- Northern Tangut
- Tangut: 𗀀 (*do¹, “poison”)
- rGyalrongic
- Lolo-Burmese-Naxi
- Lolo-Burmese
- /*ʔdok/ (Matisoff, 1972)
- Burmish
- Burmese: တောက် (tauk, “to suffer from toxicity, to be ill; to be poisonous”)
- Loloish
- Proto-Loloish: *dokᴸ (Bradley, 1979)
- Northern Loloish
- Yi (Liangshan): ꅋ (ddut, “poison; to be poisoned”)
- Sal