/ˈsækːi/, [ˈs̠ækːi]
OriginBorrowed from Old Swedish sækker (compare Swedish säck), from Proto-Germanic *sakkuz (“sack”), from Latin saccus (“large bag”), from Ancient Greek σάκκος (sákkos, “bag of coarse cloth”), from Semitic. First attested in 1323 (in the place name Sekiierue, modern Säkkijärvi).
- sack (large bag for storage and handling)
- gunny sack (coarse sack)
- figurativelysackcloth (garments worn as an act of penance)
Formssäkki(nominative, singular) · säkit(nominative, plural) · säkki(accusative, nominative, singular) · säkit(accusative, nominative, plural) · säkin(accusative, genitive, singular) · säkit(accusative, genitive, plural) · säkin(genitive, singular) · säkkien(genitive, plural) · säkkiä(partitive, singular) · säkkejä(partitive, plural) · säkissä(inessive, singular) · säkeissä(inessive, plural) · säkistä(elative, singular) · säkeistä(elative, plural) · säkkiin(illative, singular) · säkkeihin(illative, plural) · säkillä(adessive, singular) · säkeillä(adessive, plural) · säkiltä(ablative, singular) · säkeiltä(ablative, plural)