List of English words of Dutch origin
This is a list of words of
Dutch language origin. However, note that this list does also include some words of which the etymology is uncertain, and that some may have been derived from
Middle Saxon equivalents instead or as well. Some of these words, such as cookie and boss and aardvark, are without a doubt of Dutch origin. But, many of these words are similar not because they are Dutch loan words, but because English, like Dutch, is a Germanic language.
* literally: the literal meaning of the Dutch word (the actual meaning is similar to the English one)
* originally: the word originally had the meaning specified, but is in Dutch also used with the same meaning as in English
Ahoy : from hoi (="hello")Avast : from houvast (="holdfast, support")Berm : from berm to bluff : from bluffen (="to bluff");
boom : from
boom (="tree")
Boss : from baas ;
Brandy (wine) : from
brandewijn (=literally "burned wine")
Bundle : from bundel ;
Buoy : from
boei (="shackle" or "buoy")
Candy : from kandijColeslaw : from koolsla ;
Cookie : from
koekje, Hollandic
koekie Cruise : from (door)kruisen (="to cross paths or to cross");
Cruller : from Dutch
krullen "to curl"
Dapper : from dapper (brave)Dollar : from daalder ;
Deck : from
dek ="covering" (entered English as "the cover over a ship's hold")
Dock (maritime) : possibly from Middle Dutch dok ;
Drill : from Middle Dutch
dril, drilleDecoy : from eendekooi ( a contraption to catch wild ducks = eenden, it consists of a pond with tame 'decoy' ducks and a cage = kooi )Easel : from ezel (=originally "donkey")Etch : from etsenFilibuster : from Spanish filibustero from French flibustier from Dutch vrijbuiter (="pirate")Forlorn hope : from verlorene hoop (literally "lost hope", figuratively "suicide squad");
Freebooter : from
vrijbuiterTroop : from troep meaning pack. ;
Freight : from
vrachtFrolic : from vrolijk (="cheerful, gay");
Furlough : from
verlof (="permission (to leave)")
Gas : from gas, a neologism from Jan Baptista van Helmont, derived from the Greek ChaosGin : from jenever;
Grab : from
grijpen (="to seize, to grasp, to snatch")
Halibut : from heilbot (=literally "health flounder")Haul : possibly from halen( to fetch);
Hoist : possibly from Middle Dutch
hijsen Holster : from holster ;
Hunk : from
hunkeren (="to lust after")
Iceberg : probably from ijsberg, from Danish isbjerg or Swedish isberg. Isinglass : probably from Dutch huizenblasKeelhaul : from kielhalen (=literally "to haul keel")Kill (body of water) : from kil from Middle Dutch kille (=literally "riverbed) ;
Knapsack : possibly from
knapzak (=literally "bag of food")
Landscape : from landschap Leak : possibly from Middle Dutch lekenMaelstrom : from maalstroom (=literally "grinding current" or "stirring current")(possibly Norse in origin)Manikin : from manneken (=literally "little man");
Mannequin : from Dutch
manneken (=literally "little man")
Measles : possibly from mazelen ;
Morass : from
moeras(swamp)
Polder : from polder Poppycock : from pappekak (=dialect for "soft dung");
Pump : from
pompQuack : shortened from quacksalver, from kwakzalver (= literally "someone who daubs ointments")Roster : from rooster (="schedule, or grating/grill")Santa Claus : from Sinterklaas (="Saint Nicholas")Scone : from schoon (="clean");
Scow : from
schouw Skate, to skate : from schaats. The noun was originally adopted as in Dutch, with 'skates' being the singular form of the noun; due to the similarity to regular English plurals this form was ultimately used as the plural while 'skate' was derived for use as singular.";
Sketch : from
schets Skipper : from schipper (=literally "shipper");
Sled, sleigh : from Middle Dutch
slede, slee
Sloop : from sloep;
Sluice : from
sluis Slurp : from slurpen ;
(Fishing) Smack : possibly from
smak Smack (kiss/slap): possibly from MIddle Dutch smacken ;
smelt : from
smelten (="to melt")
Smuggle : from smokkelen;
Snack : perhaps from Middle Dutch
snakken (="to gasp", originally "to eat"/"chatter")
snuff : from snuiftabak (=literally "sniff tobacco");
Spa : named after Belgium mineral spring water
Splinter : from splinter ;
Split : from
splijten Spook : from spook (="ghost(ly image)");
Stenting : from
stek (="cutting") and
enten (="grafting"). This is term used specifically in propagation and cultivation of rose plants.
Stoke : from stoken (="stoke a fire");
Stoop (steps) : from
stoep (="pavement/sidewalk")
Stove : from stoof or stoven (="to cook")tattoo (military term) : from taptoe (=literally "close the tap")Trigger : from trekker (Trekken ="to pull")Waffle : from wafel Wagon : from wagen (="cart, carriage, wagon")Yacht : from jacht (=originally "hunt")Yankee : from Jan Kees, a personal name, originally used mockingly to describe pro-French revolutionary citizens, with allusion to the small keeshond dog, then for "colonials" in New Amsterdam (Note: this is not the only possible etymology for the word yankee. For one thing, the Oxford English Dictionary has quotes with the term from as early as 1765, quite some time before the French Revolution.)Zeekoe : from zeekoe (=literally "sea cow"); note that "zeekoe" in Dutch refers to the manatee, not the hippopotamus, to which the English "zeekoe" refers. This, in turn, is called "nijlpaard" (=literally "nile horse") in Dutch. However, in Afrikaans seekoei does mean hippopotamus.*
Lists of English words of international origin*
List of English words of Afrikaans origin