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  1. Dictionary
    bulk
    /bʌlk/

    noun

    • 1. the mass or size of something large: "residents jump up and down on their rubbish to reduce its bulk" Similar sizevolumedimensionsmeasurements
    • 2. the greater part of something: "the bulk of the traffic had passed" Similar majoritygreater quantity/numberlarger part/numberbest/better partOpposite minority

    verb

    • 1. treat (a product) so that its quantity appears greater than it is: "traders were bulking up their flour with chalk"
    • 2. combine (shares or commodities for sale): "your shares will be bulked with others and sold at the best prices available"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Jun 2, 2024 · bolk (third-person singular simple present bolks, present participle bolking, simple past and past participle bolked) ( intransitive) To belch. ( intransitive) To vomit; retch. ( intransitive) To heave. ( intransitive) To gush out.

  3. Origin of Bolk. From Middle English bolken, balken (“to vomit, overflow”), from Old English bealcan (“to belch, utter, bring up, sputter out, pour out, give forth, emit, come forth”), from Proto-Germanic *belkaną (“to belch”). Cognate with Dutch balken & bulken (“to bellow”), German bölken (“to roar”). See also belch.

  4. noun. uk / bʌlk / us / bʌlk / Add to word list. [ C usually singular ] something or someone that is very large: She eased her large bulk out of the chair. [ U ] large size or mass: It was a document of surprising bulk. in bulk. C1. in large amounts: The office buys paper in bulk to keep down costs. See more. the bulk of something. C1.

  5. Bulk definition: magnitude in three dimensions, especially great size or extent. See examples of BULK used in a sentence.

  6. noun. us / bʌlk / uk / bʌlk / Add to word list. [ C usually singular ] something or someone that is very large: She eased her large bulk out of the chair. [ U ] large size or mass: It was a document of surprising bulk. in bulk. C1. in large amounts: The office buys paper in bulk to keep down costs. See more. the bulk of something. C1.

  7. The earliest known use of the verb bolk is in the Middle English period (1150—1500). OED's earliest evidence for bolk is from 1382, in the writing of John Wyclif, theologian, philosopher, and religious reformer. bolk is a word inherited from Germanic. See etymology.

  8. bolk. Lodewijk 'Louis' Bolk (10 December 1866, Overschie – 17 June 1930, Amsterdam) was a Dutch anatomist who created the fetalization theory about the human body. It states that when a human being is born, it is still a fetus, as can be seen by its (proportionally) big head, lack of coordination, and helplessness.

  9. ( intransitive) To vomit; retch. ( intransitive) To heave. ( intransitive) To gush out. ( transitive) To belch out; give vent to; ejaculate. Related words & phrases. bolk ( Norwegian Nynorsk) Origin & history. From Old Norse bǫlkr, balkr . Pronunciation. IPA: /bɔlk/ Noun.

  10. en.bab.la › dictionary › englishbab.la

    bab.la

  11. The definition of bolk in Dictionary is as: (intransitive) To belch. Meaning of bolk for the defined word. Grammatically, this word "bolk" is a verb, more specifically, an intransitive verb and a transitive verb.