mosk
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See also: móšk
English
[edit]Noun
[edit]mosk (plural mosks)
- Archaic form of mosque.
- 1846, Henry Keppel, The Expedition to Borneo[1], HTML edition, The Gutenberg Project, published 2007:
- Should the English hoist their flag here, a new factory must be erected; the most eligible situation for which would be where the mosk now stands, or the mosk itself might be converted into one, and another rebuilt elsewhere; but to this the sultan has insuperable objections. In an English fort, to think to have a mosk open to the ingress of a large body of Malays at all times is wholly incompatible with a certain reserve and security required from it.
- 1900, Richard F. Burton, Supplement Nights to The Book of the Thousand And One Nights, Vol 6[2], Online edition, The Gutenberg Project, published 2002:
- Then I left the mosk and began to promenade the quarters and the streets ...
Anagrams
[edit]West Frisian
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Middle Dutch mussche, from Old Dutch musca, from Latin musca (“fly”).
Noun
[edit]mosk c (plural mosken, diminutive moskje)
Further reading
[edit]- “mosk (I)”, in Wurdboek fan de Fryske taal (in Dutch), 2011
Categories:
- English lemmas
- English nouns
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- English archaic forms
- English terms with quotations
- West Frisian terms borrowed from Middle Dutch
- West Frisian terms derived from Middle Dutch
- West Frisian terms derived from Old Dutch
- West Frisian terms derived from Latin
- West Frisian lemmas
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- West Frisian common-gender nouns
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