soke |
moke |
As a noun soke
is (obsolete) any of several medieval rights, either to hold a court, or to receive fines.
soke |
sope |
As a noun soke
is (obsolete) any of several medieval rights, either to hold a court, or to receive fines.
As a verb sope is
.
loke |
soke |
As a proper noun loke
is loki.
As a noun soke is
(obsolete) any of several medieval rights, either to hold a court, or to receive fines.
soke |
sike |
As a noun soke
is (obsolete) any of several medieval rights, either to hold a court, or to receive fines.
As a verb sike is
3rd-person dual si-perfective neuter of .
soke |
seke |
As a noun soke
is any of several medieval rights, either to hold a court, or to receive fines.
As a verb seke is
an archaic spelling of lang=en.
soke |
syke |
As nouns the difference between soke and syke
is that
soke is any of several medieval rights, either to hold a court, or to receive fines while
syke is an alternative spelling of lang=en.
scoke |
soke |
As nouns the difference between scoke and soke
is that
scoke is (botany) pokeweed,
phytolacca americana (formerly ) while
soke is (obsolete) any of several medieval rights, either to hold a court, or to receive fines.
sone |
soke |
As nouns the difference between sone and soke
is that
sone is a subjective unit of loudness for an average listener equal to the loudness of a 1000-hertz sound that has an intensity 40 decibels above the listener's own threshold of hearing while
soke is any of several medieval rights, either to hold a court, or to receive fines.
poke |
soke |
As nouns the difference between poke and soke
is that
poke is (us|slang) a lazy person; a dawdler or
poke can be or
poke can be (dialectal) pokeweed while
soke is (obsolete) any of several medieval rights, either to hold a court, or to receive fines.
As a verb poke
is to prod or jab with a pointed object such as a finger or a stick.
sole |
soke |
As a verb sole
is .
As a noun soke is
(obsolete) any of several medieval rights, either to hold a court, or to receive fines.
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