Barking

[ bahr-king ]
/ ˈbɑr kɪŋ /

noun

a borough of Greater London, England.

Definition for barking (2 of 3)

bark 1
[ bahrk ]
/ bɑrk /

noun

verb (used without object)

verb (used with object)

to utter in a harsh, shouting tone: barking orders at her subordinates.

Origin of bark

1
before 900; Middle English berken, Old English beorcan; akin to Old English borcian to bark, Old Norse berkja to bluster, Lithuanian burgė́ti to growl, quarrel, Serbo-Croatian br̀gljati to murmur

OTHER WORDS FROM bark

bark·less, adjective

Definition for barking (3 of 3)

bark 2
[ bahrk ]
/ bɑrk /

noun

verb (used with object)

Origin of bark

2
1250–1300; Middle English < Old Norse bǫrkr (genitive barkar)

OTHER WORDS FROM bark

bark·less, adjective

Example sentences from the Web for barking

British Dictionary definitions for barking (1 of 4)

barking
/ (ˈbɑːkɪŋ) slang /

adjective

mad; crazy

adverb

(intensifier) barking mad

British Dictionary definitions for barking (2 of 4)

bark 1
/ (bɑːk) /

noun

verb

Word Origin for bark

Old English beorcan; related to Lithuanian burgěti to quarrel, growl

British Dictionary definitions for barking (3 of 4)

bark 2
/ (bɑːk) /

noun

a protective layer of dead corky cells on the outside of the stems of woody plants
any of several varieties of this substance that can be used in tanning, dyeing, or in medicine
an informal name for cinchona

verb (tr)

Word Origin for bark

C13: from Old Norse börkr; related to Swedish, Danish bark, German Borke; compare Old Norse björkr birch

British Dictionary definitions for barking (4 of 4)

bark 3
/ (bɑːk) /

noun

a variant spelling (esp US) of barque

Scientific definitions for barking

bark
[ bärk ]

The protective outer covering of the trunk, branches, and roots of trees and other woody plants. Bark includes all tissues outside the vascular cambium. In older trees, bark is usually divided into inner bark, consisting of living phloem, and outer bark, consisting of the periderm (the phelloderm, cork cambium, and cork) and all the tissues outside it. The outer bark is mainly dead tissue that protects the tree from heat, cold, insects, and other dangers. The appearance of bark varies according to the manner in which the periderm forms, as in broken layers or smoother rings. Bark also has lenticels, porous corky areas that allow for the exchange of water vapor and gases with the interior living tissues.

Idioms and Phrases with barking

bark