[vâlks]
OriginRelated to the verbs vilkt (“to pull, draw, drag”) and valkāt (“to wear”), all from Proto-Baltic *wilk-, from Proto-Indo-European *welk- (“to pull, draw, drag”).
- raresomething for everyday, not special (esp. clothes)
“manas valka drēbes varēsi paņemt” — my everyday clothes you can take
- dialectalcreek, brook, small water stream
“viņa aizstaigā līdz valkam” — she walked to the stream
“viņas gāja pāri valkam pa iztrupējušu tiltiņu” — they went over the brook on a little rotten bridge
Formsvalks(nominative, singular) · valki(nominative, plural) · valka(genitive, singular) · valku(genitive, plural) · valkam(dative, singular) · valkiem(dative, plural) · valku(accusative, singular) · valkus(accusative, plural) · valku(instrumental, singular) · valkiem(instrumental, plural) · valkā(locative, singular) · valkos(locative, plural) · valk(singular, vocative) · valki(plural, vocative)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0