nik

  • 101Nik Witkowski — Pour les personnes ayant le même patronyme, voir Witkowski. Nikyta Witkowski, né le 2 juin 1976 à Londres (Angleterre) est un joueur de rugby à XV canadien, évoluant au poste de trois quart centre pour l équipe nationale du Canada. Il joue dans… …

    Wikipédia en Français

  • 102Nik-O-Lok Company — The Nik O Lok Company is a company founded in 1910 with headquarters in Indianapolis, Indiana, that manufactures and leases door locks for pay toilets. Locks are designed that can be operated by manufacturer supplied tokens or by coins (quarters) …

    Wikipedia

  • 103-nik — noun suffix Etymology: Yiddish, from Polish & Ukrainian one connected with or characterized by being < beatnik > …

    New Collegiate Dictionary

  • 104-nik — a suffix of nouns that refer, usually derogatorily, to persons who support or are concerned or associated with a particular political cause or group, cultural attitude, or the like: beatnik, filmnik; no goodnik; peacenik. [ < Yiddish (cf. NUDNIK) …

    Universalium

  • 105NIK — Nikkei 300 Index (Business » General) * Niokolo Koba, Senegal (Regional » Airport Codes) …

    Abbreviations dictionary

  • 106nik — ISO 639 3 Code of Language ISO 639 2/B Code : ISO 639 2/T Code : ISO 639 1 Code : Scope : Individual Language Type : Living Language Name : Southern Nicobarese …

    Names of Languages ISO 639-3

  • 107-nik — suffix (forming nouns) denoting a person associated with a specified thing or quality: beatnik. Origin from Russ. (on the pattern of sputnik) and Yiddish …

    English new terms dictionary

  • 108nik — o (G). Victory; strife …

    Dictionary of word roots and combining forms

  • 109NIK — abbr. Northern Ireland Korfball …

    Dictionary of abbreviations

  • 110-nik — suffix informal (in nouns) someone who is connected with something or enjoys something: a computernik (=someone who works with or is very keen on computers) | a peacenik (=someone who supports peace) nil /nIl/ noun (U) 1 nothing: The new machine&#8230; …

    Longman dictionary of contemporary English