Söke – מילון אנגלי-אנגלי
Soke
, pronounced , is a
Japanese term that means "the head family [house]." In the realm of Japanese traditional arts, it is used synonymously with the term
iemoto. Thus, it is often used to indicate "headmaster" (or sometimes translated as "head of the family" or even "
grand master".) The English translation of soke as "grand master" is not a literal translation but it does see use by some Japanese sources. It can mean one who is the leader of any school or the master of a style, but it is most commonly used as a highest level
Japanese title, referring to the singular leader of a school or style of
martial art. The term, however, is not limited to the genre of martial arts.
Soke may refer to:
- Soke (legal), an early Western jurisdictional concept
- Soke (dance) or eke, a Tongan stick dance, originating from Wallis and Futuna
- , a Japanese title meaning "head of the family," and is usually used to denote the headmaster of a school of Japanese martial arts
- Soke of Peterborough, an administrative region of England until 1965
- Soke is an alternative spelling of Zoque, a Mexican indigenous people
- Söke, a town in the Aydin province of Turkey
Söke
Söke is a town and a large district of
Aydin Province in the
Aegean region of western
Turkey, 54 km (34 miles) south-west of the city of
Aydin, near the Aegean coast. It had 68,020 population in 2010.
sökmek
v.
rip, unstitch, ravel, ravel out, rip off, undo, tear down, unfix, detach, demount, dismount, cut loose, disassemble, disjoint, dismantle, knock down, read, slit, take down, unpick, unrig
Soke
(n.)
See Soc.
(n.)
One of the small territorial divisions into which Lincolnshire, England, is divided.
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913), edited by Noah Porter.
About
şoke
shocked
soke