/kʊɫˈkɐ/
OriginBorrowed from a Slavic language. Compare Polish kulka (“ball, bullet”), Czech kulka (“id”), Ukrainian ку́лька (kúlʹka, “globule, bead”).
Formskulkà(canonical, feminine, stress-pattern-2) · kul̃kos(plural) · kulkà(nominative, singular) · kul̃kos(nominative, plural) · kul̃kos(genitive, singular) · kul̃kų(genitive, plural) · kul̃kai(dative, singular) · kul̃koms(dative, plural) · kul̃ką(accusative, singular) · kulkàs(accusative, plural) · kulkà(instrumental, singular) · kul̃komis(instrumental, plural) · kul̃koje(locative, singular) · kul̃kose(locative, plural) · kul̃ka(singular, vocative) · kul̃kos(plural, vocative)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0