Proto-Germanic: *stikēn, *stikjōn, *stikja-n, *stika-n, *stakēn, *staki-z, *stakka-z, -ēn; *stikkēn, -ōn, *stikka-n, -z
Meaning: stick
Gothic: stak-s m.? `mark'; (i)hlīɵra-stakīn-s f. (i/ō) `Feast of Tabernacles ( = `pitching of booths')'
Old Norse: ljōsa-stjaki m. `Leuchter', NIsl stjaki; stakk-r m. `Heuschober, Haufen'; lǖsi-staki m. `Leuchter'; stikk n., stikka f. `Stock, Stecken'; stika f. `Stange', stik n. `Stock, Pfahl'
Norwegian: stjakje
Old Swedish: staki `Stange, Spiess'
Swedish: stack `Schober'; stake `Stange'; sticka; stäk
Danish: stak `Schober'; stage `Stange'; stikke
Old English: staca, -an m. `stake'; { sticca m. }
English: stake; stick
Old Saxon: stekko
Middle Dutch: stāke m., f.; stecke, stec m. `paal, stok, pin'
Dutch: stek m.; staak m.
Middle Low German: stāke `Stange, Spiess'; stak `schräger Damm aus Pfählen und Reisig'
Old High German: stecko m. `Knüttel, Pfahl, Stecken, Pflock' (um 800); dat. stache `young deer'; stehho `Stange, Pfahl' (9.Jh.)
Middle High German: stɛcke wk. m. 'stecken, knüttel, pfahl, pflock', { stec }; { steche }
German: Stecken m.; Stake f., Staken m. (< LG)
germet-meaning,germet-prnum,germet-got,germet-onord,germet-norw,germet-oswed,germet-swed,germet-dan,germet-oengl,germet-engl,germet-osax,germet-mdutch,germet-dutch,germet-mlg,germet-ohg,germet-mhg,germet-hg,