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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
berk
noun
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ All Henry had done was poison a chicken which the berk had then insisted on eating.
▪ First of all, he appeared on television like he was some kind of game-show berk, not a businessman.
▪ He probably looks like an absolute berk in this outfit.
▪ What half-arsed plot was that berk hatching now?
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
berk

"fool," 1936, abbreviation of Berkshire Hunt (or Berkeley Hunt), rhyming slang for cunt but typically applied only to contemptible persons, not to the body part.\nThis is not an objective, anatomical term, neither does it imply coitus. It connects with that extension of meaning of the unprintable, a fool, or a person whom one does not like. ["Dictionary of Rhyming Slang," 1960]

Wiktionary
berk

n. 1 (context British slang pejorative English) A fool, prat, twit. 2 (context British slang English) An idiot, in an affectionate sense. 3 (context Cockney rhyming slang vulgar English) cunt.

WordNet
berk

n. a stupid person who is easy to take advantage of

Wikipedia
Berk

Berk may refer to:

  • Berk (name), a list of people with either the surname or given name
  • Berk, Bolu, Turkey, a village
  • Berk Trade and Business School, New York City
  • Berk, a fictional island in the How to Train Your Dragon series of books and the film franchise loosely based on them.
  • , a torpedo cruiser of the Ottoman Navy later renamed Berk

Usage examples of "berk".

The top prongs are all going gay, or opting for pornographic berk women.

He and Belcher went across now to the table upon which Berks was still perched.

Joe Berks, who had grown noisier and more quarrelsome as the evening went on, tried to clamber across the table, with horrible blasphemies, to come to blows with an old Jew named Fighting Yussef, who had plunged into the discussion.

It was clear that Berks had got to the stage when he must fight some one.

Mendoza and Dutch Sam were commissioned to attend to Berks, while Belcher and Jack Harrison did the same for Boy Jim.

Joe Berks in the meanwhile had swaggered in and stood with folded arms between his seconds in the opposite corner.

The two men had stood up to each other, Jim as light upon his feet as a goat, with his left well out and his right thrown across the lower part of his chest, while Berks held both arms half extended and his feet almost level, so that he might lead off with either side.

For an instant they looked each other over, and then Berks, ducking his head and rushing in with a handover-hand style of hitting, bored Jim down into his corner.

It was evident that Berks meant to finish the battle off-hand, whilst Jim, with two of the most experienced men in England to advise him, was quite aware that his correct tactics were to allow the ruffian to expend his strength and wind in vain.

What happened was so quick that I cannot set its sequence down in words, but I saw Jim make a quick stoop under the swinging arms, and at the same instant I heard a sharp, ringing smack, and there was Jim dancing about in the middle of the ring, and Berks lying upon his side on the floor, with his hand to his eye.

They were both at the mark in an instant, Jim as full of sprightly confidence as ever, and Berks with a fixed grin upon his bull-dog face and a most vicious gleam in the only eye which was of use to him.

So now we had a reversal of tactics, for it was Jim who went in to hit with all the vigour of his young strength and unimpaired energy, while it was the savage Berks who was paying his debt to Nature for the many injuries which he had done her.

Every instant now was in favour of Berks, and already his breathing was easier and the bluish tinge fading from his face.

So Boy Jim went down to the George, at Crawley, under the charge of Jim Belcher and Champion Harrison, to train for his great fight with Crab Wilson, of Gloucester, whilst every club and bar parlour of London rang with the account of how he had appeared at a supper of Corinthians, and beaten the formidable Joe Berks in four rounds.

Belcher was half frenzied by this sudden ending of all the pains which he had taken in the training, and could only rave out threats at Berks and his companions, with terrible menaces as to what he would do when he met them.