Buck
Buck (buk) , noun
[Akin to LG. buke, Danish byg, Swedish byk, German bauche: compare Italian bucato, Prov. Sp. bugada, French buée.]
Buck (bukt) , transitive verb
[Old English bouken; akin to LG. buken, Danish byge, Swedish byka, German bauchen, beuchen; compare Old French buer. Compare the preceding noun.]
Buck (buk) , noun
[Old English buk, bucke, Anglo-Saxon bucca, bua, he-goat; akin to Dutch bok, Old High German pocch, German bock, Ir. boc, Welsh bwch, Corn. byk; compare Zend būza, Sanskrit bukka. r256. Compare Butcher, n.]
A male fallow deer is called a fawn in his first year; a pricket in his second; a sorel in his third; a sore in his fourth; a buck of the first head in his fifth; and a great buck in his sixth. The female of the fallow deer is termed a doe. The male of the red deer is termed a stag or hart and not a buck, and the female is called a hind.
The word buck is much used in composition for the names of antelopes; as, bush buck, spring buck.
Buck (buk) , intransitive verb
Buck , transitive verb
Buck , noun
Collocations (1)
Buck , noun
[See Beech, n.]