Associations to the word «Uk»
Noun
- Chart
- Aldershot
- Single
- Osprey
- Shrewsbury
- Indie
- Names
- Promo
- Shropshire
- Ltd
- Chichester
- Constituency
- Us
- Airplay
- Decca
- Vinyl
- Blackwell
- Consultancy
- Cambridge
- Platinum
- Bbc
- Cd
- Bromley
- Selling
- Retailer
- Anglia
- Limited
- Usa
- Cassette
- Cornwall
- Cheltenham
- Hove
- Charity
- Headline
- Premiere
- Billboard
- Harlow
- Hammersmith
- Kennel
- Sales
- Nottingham
- Mp
- Barnsley
- Paperback
- Keynes
- Tour
- Surrey
- Brighton
- Ireland
- Tyne
- Reaching
- Topping
- Hit
- Gig
- Birmingham
- Fontana
- Guildford
- Thatcher
- Brit
- Hertfordshire
- Manchester
- Gloucestershire
- Oxford
- Leeds
- Leicester
- Distributor
- Dependency
- Midlands
- Gamer
- Scandinavia
- Parliament
- Airbus
- Reggae
- Organisation
- Eurovision
- Nickelodeon
- Records
- Programme
- Sheffield
- Reissue
Pictures for the word «Uk»
Wiktionary
UK, proper noun. Abbreviation of United Kingdom.
UK, adjective. British; related to the United Kingdom.
UK, symbol. Alternative spelling of µK
UK FUNKY, noun. A genre of electronic dance music derived from UK garage, afrobeat, and other genres.
UK GARAGE, noun. (music genre) A genre of electronic music descended from house music, originating from England in the early 1990s, typically featuring a syncopated 4/4 percussive rhythm with "shuffling" hi-hats and beat-skipping kick drums.
UK HARDCORE, noun. A genre of music that evolved in the United Kingdom from happy hardcore and rave.
UK INDEPENDENCE PARTY, proper noun. A Euro-sceptic political party in the United Kingdom.
UK PLC, noun. (informal) The United Kingdom commercial community considered as a single organization; or the commercial interests of the United Kingdom considered as a whole
Dictionary definition
UK, noun. A monarchy in northwestern Europe occupying most of the British Isles; divided into England and Scotland and Wales and Northern Ireland; `Great Britain' is often used loosely to refer to the United Kingdom.
Wise words
In the End, we will remember not the words of our enemies,
but the silence of our friends.