Nêr
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kakkerlak

Mane (Îngilîzî)

  1. (masculine) cockroach (certain non-termite insect of the order Blattodea)
  2. (derogatory, masculine) contemptible person
  3. (colloquial, derogatory, masculine, often) supporter of Feyenoord

Têgeh

sîsirk

سیسرک

سیسارک

Pircarînî

C2
Wekî (IPA) tê bilêvkirin
/ˈkɑ.kərˌlɑk/
Etîmolojî (Îngilîzî)

First attested as kackerlack towards the end of the 16th century as a derogatory term for a chatterbox or sycophant, deriving from kakker, a contemptuous term derived from kakken (“to shit, defecate”), and lakker (“talker, freeloader”), from likken (“to lick”). This word was subsequently conflated (from the mid-17th century onwards) with an unrelated early Portuguese form cacalacca designating the insect. The Portuguese word has in turn been argued to be derived from a Caribbean word, from which Spanish cucaracha and hence English cockroach also originate. However, a more likely theory is that the Portuguese learned that name from the people in the then Dahomey. In Fon, kakalaka means cockroaches.

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