quword 趣词
Word Origins Dictionary
- kraal




- kraal: see corral
- Baal




- Biblical, from Hebrew Ba'al, literally "owner, master, lord," a title applied to any deity (including Jehovah), but later a name of a particular Semitic solar deity worshipped licentiously by the Phoenecians and Carthaginians; from ba'al "he took possession of," also "he married;" related to or derived from Akkadian Belu (source of Hebrew Bel), name of Marduk. Identical with the first element in Beelzebub and the second in Hannibal. Used figuratively in English for any "false god."
- kraal (n.)




- "village, pen, enclosure," 1731, South African, from colonial Dutch kraal, from Portuguese curral (see corral).
- Quaalude (n.)




- 1965, proprietary name (trademark by Wm. H. Rohrer Inc., Ft. Washington, Pennsylvania, U.S.A.) of methaqualone.
- dwaal




- "A dreamy, dazed, or absent-minded state", Afrikaans.