urchin

Etymology
From, , from , from , from. Compare modern 🇨🇬, whence the English doublet.

Pronunciation

 * , urchin
 * , urchin
 * , urchin
 * , urchin
 * , urchin

Noun

 * 1) A mischievous child.
 * 2) A street urchin, a child who lives, or spends most of their time, in the streets.
 * 3) A sea urchin.
 * 4) One of a pair in a series of small card cylinders arranged around a carding drum; so called from its fancied resemblance to the hedgehog.
 * 5)  A neutron-generating device that triggered the nuclear detonation of the earliest plutonium atomic bombs.
 * 6)  A hedgehog.
 * 7)  A mischievous elf supposed sometimes to take the form of a hedgehog.
 * 1)  A neutron-generating device that triggered the nuclear detonation of the earliest plutonium atomic bombs.
 * 2)  A hedgehog.
 * 3)  A mischievous elf supposed sometimes to take the form of a hedgehog.

Translations

 * Azerbaijani: şuluq
 * Bulgarian: ,
 * Dutch:
 * Esperanto:
 * French:
 * Georgian:
 * German:, , , , ,
 * Greek: ,
 * Hungarian: ,
 * Ido:
 * Italian:, , , ,
 * Japanese: 小汚いガキ
 * Occitan: esparnèl, galapian
 * Portuguese:
 * Romanian:
 * Russian:, ,
 * Serbo-Croatian:
 * Spanish:, , golfillo
 * Turkish: