reck

English dictionary entry

Meanings

verb
  1. To take account of (someone or something); to care for; to consider, to heed, to regard.
  2. To want (to do something); to desire to, to be inclined to, to care to.
  3. To know about, to know of, to be aware of.
  4. To reckon, to consider, to regard (someone or something) as.
  5. To concern (someone); to be important or of interest to; to matter.
  6. To concern oneself, to trouble oneself.

Pronunciation

/ɹɛk/ LL-Q1860 (eng)-Neøn-reck.wav

Word forms

reck recks recking recked rought raught reak

Etymology

From Middle English recken, rekken, reken, from Old Norse rœkja (compare Old English rēċċan, rēċan (“to care, reck, take care of, be interested in, care for, desire”); whence English retch), from Proto-Germanic *rōkijaną (“to care, take care”), from Proto-Indo-European *rēǵ-, *rēg- (“to care, help”). Cognate with obsolete Dutch roeken, Low German roken, ruken (“to reck, care”), German geruhen (“to deign, condescend”), Icelandic rækja (“to care, regard, discharge”), Danish røgte (“to care, tend”), Swedish rykta (“to groom”). See reckon.

This entry uses open data from Wiktionary (CC BY-SA/GFDL). Word forms are used for search and are not indexed as separate pages.