出典:Wiktionary
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2026/05/11 18:09 UTC 版)
From earlier peake, peek, peke, from 中期英語 pek (in place names), itself an alteration of pike, pyke, pyk (“a sharp point, pike”), from 古期英語 pīc, piic (“a pike, needle, pin, peak, pinnacle”), from Proto-West Germanic *pīk, from Proto-Germanic *pīkaz (“peak”).
Cognate with Dutch piek (“pike, point, summit, peak”), Danish pik (“pike, peak”), Swedish pik (“pike, lance, point, peak”), Norwegian pik (“peak, summit”). More at pike.
peak (third-person singular simple present peaks, present participle peaking, simple past and past participle peaked)
"Yes!" the woman shouted, peaking the speakers with a screech. "Of course I am! What the hell else could this be?! Of course I'm seeing double! And hearing double! AND THINKING DOUBLE! AND I'M DOING THE BEST I CAN WITH IT, BUT IT'S GETTING TO BE JUST A LITTLE BIT MUCH!" Her voice grew increasingly hoarse as it grew in volume, finally cracking on the last word.
peak (comparative more peak, superlative most peak)
Unknown. Perhaps related to Etymology 1 above in the sense of "becoming pointed" through emaciation.
peak (third-person singular simple present peaks, present participle peaking, simple past and past participle peaked)
peak (third-person singular simple present peaks, present participle peaking, simple past and past participle peaked)
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the top
a lofty peak
a lofty peak
a lofty peak
a high peak
上の方へ
急傾斜の
the high water mark
the candidate polling the largest number of votes
the main-top
a height
the rooftop
the high jump