kosokoso

Japanese

Romanization

kosokoso

  1. Rōmaji transcription of こそこそ

Sranan Tongo

Etymology

Reduplication of koso, probably from Kongo kòso-kóso/Kongo kòsu-kósu/Kongo kòsula/Kongo kósúl-a, from Proto-Bantu *-koc-Ud- (to cough).[1]

Noun

kosokoso

  1. the act of repeated coughing
    • 1783, C. L. Schumann, Neger-Englisches Worterbuch [Negro English Dictionary]:
      ju meki kossókossò tumussi
      You're coughing too much.
    • 1975, Edgar Cairo, “Wan pisi fu libi”, in Ursy M. Lichtveld, Jan Voorhoeve, editors, Creole drum. An Anthology of Creole Literature in Surinam, New Haven, London: Yale University Press, →ISBN, page 254:
      Wan takru sortu kosokoso di no abi kaba a ben gwenti e kisi. Ala yuru wan pikin pisi tabaka ben e anga na en mofobuba. Mi ben e kari dati en ‘tabakaworon.’ Te a ben tan, dan a ben ari wan dampu fu na ‘lespeki tabaka.’ Nanga kosokoso a smoko e ari en srefi komopo na ini en gorogoro.
      He used to get a nasty cough that had no end. There was always a piece of tobacco dangling from his lips. I used to call it his ‘tobacco worm.’ He was always puffing at his very strong tobacco. Coughingly, the smoke belched from his throat.

References

  1. Norval Smith (2015) “A preliminary list of probable Kikongo (KiKoongo) lexical items in the Surinam Creoles”, in P. Muysken, N. Smith, editors, Surviving the Middle Passage: The West Africa-Surinam Sprachbund, Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton, →ISBN, page 436
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