rawk
English
editEtymology 1
editRelated to roke (“mist; smoke”), Swedish rök (“smoke”). Compare raggy (“foggy”).
Noun
editrawk (plural rawks)
- (Yorkshire) A thick fog.
- (Can we date this quote?) Clare, manuscript poems, quoted in 1854, Anne Elizabeth Baker, Glossary of Northamptonshire Words and Phrases, page 163:
- The rawk o' the hills, and the mist o' the mountains, / Like the reek o'a pot, and the smoke of a kiln, / Draws further off still, while the round sun is counting / His pulses o' light o' the morning so still.
- (Can we date this quote?) Clare, manuscript poems, quoted in 1854, Anne Elizabeth Baker, Glossary of Northamptonshire Words and Phrases, page 163:
Etymology 2
editCompare roke (“defect in steel”).
Noun
editrawk (plural rawks)
- (UK, dialectal, possibly obsolete) A mark.
- 1865, William Stott Banks, Wakefield Words:
- Rawks o' muck dahn't side on his faace.
- 1896 June 27, Yorkshire Weekly Post:
- 'At drew all them rawks.
- 1943, Textile Colorist: A Monthly Journal Devoted to Practical Dyeing, Bleaching, Printing and Finishing, Dyes, Dyestuffs and Chemicals as Applied to Dyeing, volume 65, page 241:
- When the piece is on shade, cool down gradually and thoroughly to avoid “rawks” […]
Etymology 3
editNoun
editrawk (uncountable)
- Pronunciation spelling of rock (“music genre”).
- I enjoy listening to good rawk.
- [2005 May, Chuck Klosterman, “The Rock Lexicon”, in SPIN, page 61:
- RAWK: This is how people who start bands in order to meet porn stars spell rock.]
Verb
editrawk (third-person singular simple present rawks, present participle rawking, simple past and past participle rawked)
- Pronunciation spelling of rock.
- What do ya think 'bout it? It rawks!