Dirk - Etymology

Etymology

The term is associated with Scotland in the Early Modern Era, being attested from about 1600. The term was spelled dork or durk during the 17th century, presumably from the Dutch, Swedish and Danish dolk, via German dolch, tolch from a West Slavic tulich. The exact etymology is unclear; the sound change from -lk to -rk is rather common in Scots and Northern English loanwords from Danish (as in kirk, smirk from Danish kilche, smilke). The modern spelling dirk is probably due to Samuel Johnson's 1755 Dictionary.

The term is also used for "dagger" generically, especially in the context of prehistoric daggers such as the Oxborough dirk.

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