yokel

Etymology
1812, possibly from dialectal, diminutive of , cf. and. Alternatively, from dialectal English.

Noun

 * 1)  A person from or living in the countryside, viewed as being unsophisticated or naive.
 * 2) * 1993,, , London: Phoenix, 1994, Chapter8.6, p.560,
 * ‘You may think that because you live in Brahmpur you have seen the world―or more of the world than we poor yokels see. But some of us yokels have also seen the world―and not just the world of Brahmpur, but of Bombay. ’
 * 1) * 1993,, , London: Phoenix, 1994, Chapter8.6, p.560,
 * ‘You may think that because you live in Brahmpur you have seen the world―or more of the world than we poor yokels see. But some of us yokels have also seen the world―and not just the world of Brahmpur, but of Bombay. ’
 * 1) * 1993,, , London: Phoenix, 1994, Chapter8.6, p.560,
 * ‘You may think that because you live in Brahmpur you have seen the world―or more of the world than we poor yokels see. But some of us yokels have also seen the world―and not just the world of Brahmpur, but of Bombay. ’
 * 1) * 1993,, , London: Phoenix, 1994, Chapter8.6, p.560,
 * ‘You may think that because you live in Brahmpur you have seen the world―or more of the world than we poor yokels see. But some of us yokels have also seen the world―and not just the world of Brahmpur, but of Bombay. ’

Translations

 * Catalan: ,
 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin:, ,
 * Czech: (venkovský), ,
 * Danish: bonderøv, bondeknold
 * Dutch:, boertje van buut'n
 * Esperanto: kamparano, kamparanaĉo
 * Finnish: ,
 * French: ,
 * Galician: pailán, pailana, pailaroco, ,
 * Georgian: ტეტია,
 * German:, , , , , ,
 * Hindi: ,
 * Hungarian:, , , , ,
 * Italian: villico,, , , , , , , ,
 * Japanese:
 * Latin: petrō
 * Latvian: pāķis, lauķis
 * Macedonian: се́ланец, се́лјак
 * Maori: panekāka
 * Plautdietsch: Dommabua
 * Polish:, kindybał, , ,
 * Portuguese:, , , ,
 * Punjabi:
 * Gurmukhi: ਪੇਂਡੂ
 * Shahmukhi: پینْڈُو
 * Romanian:, ,
 * Russian: ,
 * Serbo-Croatian: ,
 * Spanish:, ,
 * Turkish:
 * Yiddish: קליינשטעטלדיקער, קליינשטעטלדיקע, פּויער, פּויערטע, גלאָמפּ