English

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A duiker (red-flanked duiker (Cephalophus rufilatus))
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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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Borrowed from Afrikaans duiker (literally diver), from Dutch duiker, from Middle Dutch dukere. Piecewise doublet of ducker.

Pronunciation

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Noun

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duiker (plural duikers)

  1. Any of several species of small southern African antelopes of the Cephalophinae subfamily.
    Hyponym: coquetoon
    • 1952, Doris Lessing, Martha Quest, Panther, published 1974, page 65:
      Next day she rose early, and went out with the gun and killed a duiker on the edge of the Big Tobacco Land (where her father had grown tobacco during his season's phase of believing in it).

Derived terms

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Descendants

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  • Irish: dícear

Translations

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Afrikaans

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Etymology

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From Dutch duiker, from Middle Dutch dukere. Equivalent to duik +‎ -er.

Pronunciation

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Noun

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duiker (plural duikers)

  1. diver (a person or thing that dives)
  2. duiker (a kind of small antelope)
  3. diver, loon (a kind of shorebird)

Descendants

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Dutch

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Twee duikers. — Two underwater divers.
 
Een duiker. — A gymnastic diver.

Etymology

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From Middle Dutch dukere. By surface analysis, duiken (to dive) +‎ -er.

Pronunciation

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Noun

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duiker m (plural duikers, diminutive duikertje n, feminine duikster)

 
Een duikertje. — A small culvert.
  1. an underwater diver
    Hyponym: kikvorsman
  2. a gymnastic diver
    Synonym: schoonspringer
  3. a fairly narrow water passage under roads and dikes; a culvert
    Synonyms: grondzijl, verlaat, zinker
  4. a loon (N-Am) or diver (UK), waterbird of the order Gaviiformes
    Synonym: zeeduiker
    Hyponyms: geelsnavelduiker, ijsduiker, parelduiker, Pacifische parelduiker, roodkeelduiker
  5. a duiker, antelope of the subfamily Cephalophinae

Derived terms

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Descendants

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