List of English words containing Q not followed by U
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In English, the letter q is usually followed by the letter u, but there are some exceptions. The majority of these are naturalised from Arabic, Chinese, Hebrew, Inuktitut, or other languages which do not use the English alphabet, with q representing a sound not found in English. For example, in the Chinese pinyin alphabet, qi is pronounced /tʃi/, as pinyin uses ‹q› to represent the sound [tɕʰ], which is approximated as [tʃ] in English. In other examples, q represents [q] (in standard Arabic, such as in qat, faqir and Qur'ān, and alternative spellings are sometimes accepted which use k in place of q. In Arabic, the romanised Q (ق) has a meaningful difference to K (ك), e.g. قلب /qɑlb/ means "heart" but كلب /kalb/ means "dog", so it is important to differentiate between the two, although, the sound Q is missing in English and many other languages, so there are versions where Q has been replaced with K or C, e.g. al-Qāhira - Cairo, Qur'ān - Koran but Iraq, Qatar retained the original romanization.
Almost all of these words are nouns, and most would generally be considered loanwords. However, they are all considered to be naturalised in English according to at least one major dictionary (see References), often because they refer to concepts or societal roles that do not have an accurate equivalent in English. For words to appear here, they must appear in their own entry in a dictionary; words which occur only as part of a longer phrase are not included.
In addition, there are many place names and personal names, mostly originating from North Africa, the Middle East or China, that have a q without a u. The most familiar of these are the countries of Iraq and Qatar, along with the derived words Iraqi and Qatari. Iqaluit, the capital of the Canadian territory of Nunavut, also has a q which is not directly followed by a u. Qaqortoq, in Greenland, is notable for having three naked qs. Other proper names and acronyms that have attained the status of English words include: Compaq (a computer company), Nasdaq (the US electronic stock market) and QinetiQ (a British technology company). Zaqqum (a tree mentioned in the Qur'an) and Saqqara are proper nouns notable for their use of a double q. However, the nouns in this list are common nouns. QANTAS, an Australian airline is a common mistake made, as it is an acronym and the q actually stands for Queensland, which has a u.
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[edit] Words
Unless noted otherwise all words listed here are assumed to be pluralized by adding -s or -es. References in the "Sources" column relate to the headword in column one; variant spellings are then separately referenced. The sources given are selective, and the absence of a reference to a particular dictionary does not necessarily mean that the word does not appear in that dictionary.
Word
|
Meaning
|
Sources
|
Other forms
|
Etymology
|
---|---|---|---|---|
Aqeeli | A big Arabic family. | [L] | Also written Aqeely. | Arabic (عقيلي). |
buqsha | A former Yemeni monetary unit. | [L] | Also written bogache. | Arabic. |
burqa | A veiled garment worn by Muslim women. | [ODE][LC][C][AHC][OED] | Also written burka or burqua. | Urdu and Persian burqa, from Arabic burqu`. |
cinq | The number five, as signified in dice or cards. | [ODE][COD][OED] | French cinq, "five". | |
cinqfoil | A plant of the genus Potentilla, or an ornamental design thereof. | [SOED][OED] | Much more commonly written cinquefoil. | Middle English, from Latin quinquefolium, from quinque "five" + folium "leaf". |
coq | A trimming of cock feathers on a woman's hat. | [WI] | French coq, "cockerel". | |
faqih | An Islamic lawyer. | [RHW] | Plural faqihs or fuqaha [RHU]. | Arabic فقيه. |
faqir | A Muslim ascetic. | [L] | More commonly written fakir. | Arabic فقير |
fiqh | Muslim jurisprudence. | [ODE] | Arabic فقه, "understanding". | |
inqilab | A revolution in India or Pakistan. | [C] | ||
Iraq | A country in the Middle East. | [AH] | ||
mbaqanga | A style of South African music. | [ODE][C][W] | Zulu umbaqanga, "steamed maize bread". | |
miqra | The Tanakh, or Hebrew text of the Bible. | [WI] | Hebrew מקרא. | |
muqaddam | A Bangladeshi headman. | [C] | ||
nastaliq | An Arabic script used in Persian writings. | [OED] | Also written nasta'liq [C], nestaliq [OED], or shortened to just taliq [OED]. | Arabic نستعليق, from naskh + ta`liq. |
pontacq | A sweet wine from Pontacq. | [OED] | ||
qabab | A dish consisting of pieces of seasoned meat. | [OED] | Much more commonly written kebab, kebob or kabob. | Persian. |
qabalah | A form of Jewish mysticism. | [C][AHC][WI] | More commonly written Kabbalah, and also written Qabala [AHC], Qabbala [WI], Cabalah etc. | Hebrew קַבָּלָה. |
qadarite | A member of the Qadariyah. | [RHU] | ||
qadariyah | In Islam, adherents of the doctrine of free will. | [RHU] | Also written Qadariya [RHU]. | |
qaddish | In Judaism, a prayer of mourning. | [C] | More commonly written Kaddish. | |
qadi | A Muslim judge. | [L][C][W][OED] | Also written qadhi [OED] or qazi [OED]. | Arabic قاضى. |
qadiriyah | In Islam, a Sufi order. | [RHU] | Also written Qadiriya [RHU]. | |
qaf | Twenty-first letter of the Arabic alphabet. | [RHW] | Arabic ق. | |
qaid | A Muslim tribal chief. | [RHW] | ||
qaimaqam | A minor official of the Ottoman Empire. | [C][OED] | ||
qalamdan | A Persian writing-case. | [C] | ||
qalandar | A member of an order of mendicant dervishes. | [RHU] | Also written calender, or capitalised. | |
qanat | A type of water supply tunnel found in north Africa and the Middle East. | [ODE][C][OED] | Persian, from Arabic qanāt, "channel". | |
qanun | A type of harp. | [OED] | Also written qanon [OED]. | |
Qaraqalpaq | A Middle-Eastern language. | [WED] | Also written Karakalpak | Qaraqalpaq Қарақалпақ тили |
qasida | An Arabian poem of praise or satire. | [C][OED] | Also written qasidah | Arabic قصيدة. |
qat | A kind of Arabian shrub used as a narcotic. | [L][C][OED] | More commonly written khat. | Arabic qāt. |
qawwal | A person who practises qawwali music. | [ODE][C] | ||
qawwali | Devotional music of the Sufis. | [ODE][C] | Arabic قوٌالی (qawwāli), "loquacious" or "singer". | |
qazi | Variant of qadi. | |||
qepiq | An Azerbaijani unit of currency. | [AH] | ||
qere | A marginal reading in the Hebrew Bible. | [OED][WI] | Also written qeri [WI] or qre [WI]. | |
qhat | An obsolete spelling of what. | [OED] | ||
qheche | An obsolete spelling of which. | [OED] | ||
qhom | An obsolete spelling of whom. | [OED] | ||
qhythsontyd | An obsolete spelling of Whitsuntide (the day of Pentecost). | [OED] | ||
qi | In Chinese culture, a physical life force. | [ODE][C][AHC][OED] | Commonly written chi or ki. | Chinese 氣, 'air' |
qiana | A type of nylon. | [OED] | Originally a trademark of DuPont, now generic. | |
qibla | The point to which Muslims turn in prayer. | [ODE][COD][C][OED] | Also written qiblah [OED], or qib'lah [RHU]. Sometimes capitalised. | 17th Century Arabic, "the opposite". |
qibli | A local Libyan name for the sirocco, a southeasterly Mediterranean wind. | [OED] | Also written ghibli. | |
qigong | A Chinese system of medical exercises. | [ODE][C] | Also written qi gong, ki gong, or chi kung. | Chinese 气功 (simp.). |
qin | A classification of Chinese musical instruments. | [AOX] | ||
qinah | A Hebrew elegy. | [WI] | Also written kinah; plural qinot, qinoth | |
qindar | An Albanian unit of currency, equal to one one-hundredth of a lek. | [ODE][L][C] | Plural qindarka [L] or qindars [C]. Also written qintar [L][C][AOX] or quintal. | Albanian. |
Qing | The last Imperial Chinese dynasty. | Also Ch'ing, Ching, or Manchu Dynasty | Chinese 清 | |
qinghaosu | A drug, artemisinin, used to treat malaria. | [C] | Chinese 青蒿素. | |
qipao | A traditional Chinese dress. | [OED] | Also written chi pao. | Chinese |
qirsh | A monetary unit of Saudi Arabia and, formerly, various other countries. | [RHU] | Also written qurush, qursh, gursh, girsh or ghirsh. | |
qiviut | The wool of the musk-ox. | [OED] | Inuktitut | |
qiyas | An analogy in Sharia, Islamic law. | [RHW] | Arabic قياس. | |
Qom | A major city in Iran which is a holy site for Shia people. | Persian قم | ||
qoph | The nineteenth letter of the Hebrew alphabet. | [L][C] | Also written koph. | Hebrew ק. |
qoppa | The nineteenth letter of the ancient Greek alphabet. | Generally written koppa. | Greek Ϟ. | |
qorma | A type of curry. | [Co] | Much more commonly written korma. | Urdu. |
qre | (Variant of qere) | |||
qwerty | A standard English keyboard layout. | [ODE][COD][LC][C][OED] | Plural qwertys or qwerties. Also rendered QWERTY. | Named after the letters on the top row of keys. |
rencq | An obsolete spelling of rank. | [OED] | ||
sambuq | A small Arabian boat. | [OED] | ||
sheqel | A unit of weight originally used in Mesopotamia. The currency of Israel, divided into 100 agorot. | [MW] | Plural sheqels or sheqalim. More commonly written shekel. | Hebrew שקל, Yiddish ניי-שקל. |
suq | A Muslim marketplace. | [ODE][C][OED] | Most commonly written souk (French spelling). | Arabic سوق (sūq). |
talaq | A form of Islamic divorce. | [ODE][C][OED] | Arabic talaq from talaqa, "repudiate". | |
taliq | (Variant of nastaliq) | |||
taluq | An Indian estate. | [OED] | Also written taluk or talook. | |
taluqdar | A person who collects the revenues of a taluq. | [OED] | Also written talukdar or talookdar. | |
taluqdari | An Indian landholding tenure. | [OED] | ||
taqiya | In Islam, the dissimulation of faith displayed for fear of one's life. | [RHW] | Also written taqiyah [RHU], or capitalised. | Arabic التقية. |
taqlid | Acceptance of Muslim orthodoxy. | [RHW] | Arabic قْلي. | |
tariqa | A Sufi method of spiritual development, or a Sufi missionary. | [E] | Also written tariqat [E] or tarika. | Arabic طريق. |
tranq | A form of sedative. | [OED] | Also written trank [OED]. | Apocopation from tranquilizer. |
tsaddiq | In Judaism, a term bestowed upon the righteous. | [C][OED] | Plural tsaddiqs or tsaddiqim. Also written tzaddiq [C], tzadik or tzaddik. | Hebrew צדיק. |
umiaq | An open inuit boat. | [OSPD4] | Also spelled umiak | |
waqf | A charitable trust in Islamic law. | [ODE][C][OED] | Plural waqf [ODE][C][OED] or waqfs [C][OED]. | Arabic, literally "stoppage" from waqafa, "come to a standstill". |
yaqona | A Fijian intoxicating beverage, kava. | [C][OED] | Fijian yaqona, in which q represents [ŋg] |
[edit] Uses
In many word games, most famously in Scrabble, a player must build a word using a certain set of letters. Therefore, if a player is obliged to use a Q but does not have a U, it may be useful to construct words from this list. In Scrabble in North America, the only acceptable words with a Q and not a U are qi, qat, qaid, qadi, qoph, qanat, tranq, faqir, sheqel, qabala, qabalah, qindar, qintar, qindarka, mbaqanga, and qwerty, along with their plurals (such as qats and sheqalim).[ TWL ] Other words in this list, such as suq and qiviut, are also acceptable, but since these contain a U, they are less likely to be useful.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- [AH]: The American Heritage Dictionary, Fourth Edition (ISBN 0-440-23701-7)
- [AHC]: American Heritage College Dictionary, Fourth Edition, 2000
- [AOX]: Ask Oxford Last accessed May 29, 2006.
- [C]: The Chambers Dictionary, 2003
- [Co]: Collins English Dictionary, Third Edition (updated 1994)
- [COD]: The Concise Oxford Dictionary, Eighth Edition, 1990
- [E]: Microsoft Encarta online dictionary Last accessed May 29, 2006.
- [L]: The Longman Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition, 1988 (ISBN 0-582-55511-6)
- [LC]: The Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Fourth Edition, 2003
- [MW]: Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, Eleventh Edition
- [MWO]: Merriam-Webster online dictionary Last accessed May 29, 2006.
- [ODE]: Oxford Dictionary of English, Second Edition, 2003 (ISBN 0-19-861347-4)
- [OED]: Oxford English Dictionary, 2003
- [OSPD4]: The Official Scrabble Players Dictionary, 2005 (ISBN 0-87779-929-6)
- [RHU]: Random House Unabridged Dictionary, 1997
- [RHW]: Random House Webster's Unabridged Dictionary, 2005 (ISBN 0-375-42599-3)
- [SOED]: The Shorter Oxford English Dictionary, Third Edition, 1992
- [W]: Random House Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, 2000
- [WI]: Webster's Third New International Dictionary, Unabridged (ISBN 0-87779-201-1)