ax

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See also: Ax, AX, -ax, .ax, ax̱, a꞉x, ˀa·x, and ах

English

Pronunciation

  • enPR: ăks, IPA(key): /æks/
    • Audio (UK):(file)
  • Rhymes: -æks

Etymology 1

Noun

ax (plural axes)

  1. (American spelling) Alternative form of axe

Verb

ax (third-person singular simple present axes, present participle axing, simple past and past participle axed)

  1. (American spelling) Alternative form of axe

Etymology 2

From Old English acsian and axian, showing metathesis from ascian. Ax/aks was common in literary works until about 1600.

Verb

ax (third-person singular simple present axes, present participle axing, simple past and past participle axed)

  1. (now nonstandard or dialectical, especially African-American Vernacular and Bermuda) Alternative form of ask
Usage notes

This and related forms of ask have been used since Old English and were long employed in literature and prestige dialects. Chaucer used ask, ax, and axe interchangeably. They remain in use in some rural areas of Britain and Appalachia but are now regarded as nonstandard and primarily associated with AAVE dialects in the US and MLE dialects in the UK.

References


Eastern Huasteca Nahuatl

Adverb

ax

  1. not

Icelandic

Etymology

From Old Norse ax

Pronunciation

Noun

ax n (genitive singular ax, nominative plural öx)

  1. ear (of corn)

Declension

    Declension of ax
n-s singular plural
indefinite definite indefinite definite
nominative ax axið öx öxin
accusative ax axið öx öxin
dative axi axinu öxum öxunum
genitive ax axins axa axanna

Jamaican Creole

Verb

ax

  1. Alternative spelling of aks.
    • 2006, Amina Blackwood-Meeks, “Aiming at your dreams”, in The Jamaica Gleaner[1]:
      “Well she sey one a de man dem come right up to har car window an show har fe him sign wid him finga, order har outa de plaza like sey it was him personal yaad an ax har if she tink sey chu hooman a go tun Prime Minista she can jus come park which part she have a mind. []
      So she said one of the men walked right up to her car window and pointed at his sign with his finger and ordered her to leave the plaza as if it were his own home. He asked her if she thought that the fact that a woman was going to become Prime Minister that she could just park anywhere she wanted to. []

Middle English

Etymology 1

From Old English æx, æcs, from Proto-West Germanic *akusi.

Alternative forms

Pronunciation

Noun

ax (plural axes)

  1. An axe (tool)
  2. An axe (weapon)
Descendants
  • English: axe, ax
  • Scots: aix
References

Etymology 2

From Old English eax, from Proto-Germanic *ahsu.

Alternative forms

Pronunciation

Noun

ax (plural axes)

  1. (rare) An axle, axletree, pole
Derived terms
References

Northern Kurdish

Etymology

Akin to Persian خاک (xâk, earth, soil, dust). Ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *h₂eHs- (to be dry).

Pronunciation

Noun

ax f (Arabic spelling ئاخ)

  1. dirt, ground, soil, earth
    Synonyms: erd, xwelî
  2. dust
    Synonym: xubar
  3. matter

Declension

Derived terms

References

  • Chyet, Michael L. (2003) “ax”, in Kurdish–English Dictionary[2], with selected etymologies by Martin Schwartz, New Haven and London: Yale University Press

Old French

Contraction

ax

  1. Contraction of a + les (to the)

Old Norse

Etymology

From Proto-Germanic *ahsą, from *ahaz (ear (of grain)).

Noun

ax n (genitive ax, plural ǫx)

  1. ear (of corn)

Declension

Descendants

  • Icelandic: ax
  • Norwegian Nynorsk: aks
  • Norwegian Bokmål: aks
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  • Old Swedish: ax
    • Swedish: ax
  • Danish: aks

References

ax”, in Geir T. Zoëga (1910) A Concise Dictionary of Old Icelandic, Oxford: Clarendon Press


Romanian

Etymology

From French axe, from Latin axis.

Noun

ax n (plural axe)

  1. axle
  2. axis

Declension


Swedish

Etymology

From Old Norse ax

Noun

ax n

  1. an ear (fruiting body of a grain plant)

Declension