būkaz
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bulk — [14] Formally, bulk comes from Old Norse búlki, which meant ‘cargo’ or ‘heap’: the original connotation of the English word in this sense was thus of goods loaded loose, in heaps, rather than neatly packed up. That is the source of the phrase in… … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins
bucket — (n.) mid 13c., from Anglo Norm. buquet bucket, pail, influenced by or dim. of O.E. buc pitcher, bulging vessel, originally belly (buckets were formerly of leather as well as wood), from P.Gmc. *bukaz, from PIE *bhou , variant of root *bheu to… … Etymology dictionary
bulk — mid 15c., from O.N. bulki a heap, ship s cargo, thus goods loaded loose, perhaps lit. rolled up load, from P.Gmc. *bul , from PIE *bhl , from root *bhel (2) to blow, inflate, swell (see BOLE (Cf. bole)). Meaning extended by confusion with… … Etymology dictionary
būka- — *būka , *būkaz germ., stark. Maskulinum (a): nhd. Bauch, Leib; ne. belly, body; Rekontruktionsbasis: got., an., ae., afries., anfrk., ahd.; Etymologie: vergleic … Germanisches Wörterbuch
bulk — [14] Formally, bulk comes from Old Norse búlki, which meant ‘cargo’ or ‘heap’: the original connotation of the English word in this sense was thus of goods loaded loose, in heaps, rather than neatly packed up. That is the source of the phrase in… … Word origins