Lick

/lɪk/ verb

Definition

pass tongue over surface; defeat decisively

Etymology

Old English 'liccian', related to German 'lecken', from Proto-Germanic root meaning 'to lick'

Kelly Says

The phrase 'lick your wounds' comes from animals literally licking their injuries - saliva actually has healing properties!

Translations

AMአማርኛ
ማንከስ
ARالعربية
يلعق
BNবাংলা
চাটা
CACatalà
llepar
CSČeština
kousat
DADansk
slikke
DEDeutsch
lecken
ELΕλληνικά
γλείφω
ESEspañol
lamer
FAفارسی
لیس زدن
FISuomi
nuolla
FRFrançais
lécher
GUGU
ચાટવું
HAHA
marmara
HEעברית
ללקק
HIहिन्दी
चाटना
HUMagyar
nyalogatni
IDBahasa Indonesia
menjilat
IGIG
ísé
ITItaliano
leccare
JA日本語
舐める
KKKK
жалау
KMKM
សុំលង់
KO한국어
핥다
MRMR
चाटणे
MSBahasa Melayu
jilat
MYမြန်မာ
လျှာ
NLNederlands
likken
NONorsk
slikke
PAPA
ਚਾਟਣਾ
PLPolski
lizać
PTPortuguês
lamber
RORomână
a linge
RUРусский
лизать
SVSvenska
slicka
SWKiswahili
kuleza
TAதமிழ்
நக்க
TEతెలుగు
నక్కు
THไทย
เลีย
TLTL
hilamot
TRTürkçe
yalamak
UKУкраїнська
лизати
URاردو
چاٹنا
VITiếng Việt
liếm
YOYO
fèlèé
ZH中文
ZUZU
ukulamba

Related Words

Explore More Words

Get the Word Orb API

Complete word intelligence in one call. Free tier — 50 lookups/day.