wake

1
[ weyk ]
/ weɪk /

verb (used without object), waked or woke, waked or wok·en, wak·ing.

verb (used with object), waked or woke, waked or wok·en, wak·ing.

noun

Origin of wake

1
before 900; (v.) in sense “to become awake” continuing Middle English waken, Old English *wacan (found only in past tense wōc and the compounds onwacan, āwacan to become awake; see awake (v.)); in sense “to be awake” continuing Middle English waken, Old English wacian (cognate with Old Frisian wakia, Old Saxon wakōn, Old Norse vaka, Gothic wakan); in sense “to rouse from sleep” continuing Middle English waken, replacing Middle English wecchen, Old English weccan, probably altered by association with the other senses and with the k of Old Norse vaka; (noun) Middle English: state of wakefulness, vigil (late Middle English: vigil over a dead body), probably continuing Old English *wacu (found only in nihtwacu night-watch); all ultimately < Germanic *wak- be lively; akin to watch, vegetable, vigil

OTHER WORDS FROM wake

wak·er, noun half-wak·ing, adjective un·waked, adjective un·wak·ing, adjective

Definition for wake (2 of 2)

wake 2
[ weyk ]
/ weɪk /

noun

the track of waves left by a ship or other object moving through the water: The wake of the boat glowed in the darkness.
the path or course of anything that has passed or preceded: The tornado left ruin in its wake.

Origin of wake

2
1540–50; < Middle Low German, Dutch wake, or Old Norse vǫk hole in the ice

Example sentences from the Web for wake

British Dictionary definitions for wake (1 of 2)

wake 1
/ (weɪk) /

verb wakes, waking, woke or woken

noun

Derived forms of wake

waker, noun

Word Origin for wake

Old English wacian; related to Old Frisian wakia, Old High German wahtēn

usage for wake

Where there is an object and the sense is the literal one wake ( up) and waken are the commonest forms: I wakened him; I woke him ( up). Both verbs are also commonly used without an object: I woke up . Awake and awaken are preferred to other forms of wake where the sense is a figurative one: he awoke to the danger

British Dictionary definitions for wake (2 of 2)

wake 2
/ (weɪk) /

noun

the waves or track left by a vessel or other object moving through water
the track or path left by anything that has passed wrecked houses in the wake of the hurricane

Word Origin for wake

C16: of Scandinavian origin; compare Old Norse vaka, vök hole cut in ice, Swedish vak, Danish vaage; perhaps related to Old Norse vökr, Middle Dutch wak wet

Cultural definitions for wake

wake

A funeral celebration, common in Ireland, at which the participants stay awake all night keeping watch over the body of the dead person before burial. A wake traditionally involves a good deal of feasting and drinking.

Idioms and Phrases with wake

wake