há·brók

  • 11brok — obs. form of brock, broke …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 12Brok et Chnok — Les Visiteurs du mercredi Les Visiteurs du mercredi Genre émission de jeunesse Réalisé par Christophe Izard Présenté par Voir rubrique <<les présentateurs>> Pays  France Langue(s) …

    Wikipédia en Français

  • 13brok — I brok 1. brok sb., ken, ke, kene (grævling) II brok 2. brok sb., ken el. ket, brok, kene (udposning af et organ), i sms. brok , fx brokoperation III brok 3. brok sb. (fk. el. itk.) (beklagelse; kludder) …

    Dansk ordbog

  • 14Brok — Infobox Settlement name = Brok imagesize = 250px image caption = Main Square image shield = POL gmina Brok COA.svg pushpin pushpin label position = bottom subdivision type = Country subdivision name = POL subdivision type1 = Voivodeship… …

    Wikipedia

  • 15Brok — Original name in latin Brok Name in other language BROK, Brok, БРОК State code PL Continent/City Europe/Warsaw longitude 52.69948 latitude 21.85704 altitude 106 Population 1896 Date 2010 09 11 …

    Cities with a population over 1000 database

  • 16Brok, Podlaskie Voivodeship — Infobox Settlement name = Brok settlement type = Village total type = image shield = subdivision type = Country subdivision name = POL subdivision type1 = Voivodeship subdivision name1 = Podlaskie subdivision type2 = County subdivision name2 =… …

    Wikipedia

  • 17Brok — Recorded in the spellings of Broke, de Broke, Brook, Brooke, Brookes, Brooker, Brooking, Brookman, Brooks (England, Scotland, Ireland), Brok, Broeck, Ten Broek, Van den Broek (Dutch, Flemish), Brook, Broker, Broek, von Brook (Germany) and others …

    Surnames reference

  • 18Brok — Sp Bròkas Ap Brok L u. ir mst. C Lenkijoje …

    Pasaulio vietovardžiai. Internetinė duomenų bazė

  • 19Brôk — * T is as wenn n in n nie Brok kickt. – Danneil, 277a. Um zu sagen: das ist ein erfreulicher Anblick. Namentlich bedient sich der Kartenspieler, der gute Karten in der Hand entfaltet, dieser Redensart …

    Deutsches Sprichwörter-Lexikon

  • 20brok — adj British broken, damaged, in disarray. This alter ation of broke(n) probably originated in black dialect. It was a vogue term among teenage gangs (bruck[ers] is an alterna tive form). The term was recorded in use among North London schoolboys… …

    Contemporary slang