chirk
English
Etymology
From Middle English chirken, cherken, charken, from Old English ċircian, ċearcian, ċærcian (“to chatter, creak; chirk, chirp”), a metathetic variant of Old English cracian (“to crack, sound, ring out, resound”), from Proto-Germanic *krakōną (“to make a noise, crack”).
Verb
chirk (third-person singular simple present chirks, present participle chirking, simple past and past participle chirked)
Scots
Alternative forms
- chairk, jirg
Etymology
From Old English cracian, ċearcian, ċiercian, from Proto-Germanic *krakōną (“to crack; crackle; shriek”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [tʃɪrk], [tʃʌrk]
Noun
chirk (plural chirks)
Verb
chirk (third-person singular present chirks, present participle chirkin, past chirkit, past participle chirkit)
Derived terms
- chirker (“house-cricket”)
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