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Origin and history of yok

yok(n.)

slang, "gentile, non-Jew," pejorative, 1920, from Yiddish, where it is back-slang, a reversed and altered form of goy (q.v.).

Entries linking to yok

"a gentile, a non-Jew" (plural goyim), 1835, from Hebrew goy "people, nation;" in Mishnaic and Modern Hebrew, also "gentile" (compare gentile). The fem. form of the Hebrew word entered French as gouge "a wench" (15c.).

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    Trends of yok

    adapted from books.google.com/ngrams/ with a 7-year moving average; ngrams are probably unreliable.

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