How many points in Scrabble is seek worth? seek how many points in Words With Friends? What does seek mean? Get all these answers on this page.
See how to calculate how many points for seek.
Is seek a Scrabble word?
Yes. The word seek is a Scrabble US word. The word seek is worth 8 points in Scrabble:
S1E1E1K5
Is seek a Scrabble UK word?
Yes. The word seek is a Scrabble UK word and has 8 points:
S1E1E1K5
Is seek a Words With Friends word?
Yes. The word seek is a Words With Friends word. The word seek is worth 8 points in Words With Friends (WWF):
S1E1E1K5
You can make 9 words from seek according to the Scrabble US and Canada dictionary.
seek esek seek esek eesk eesk seke eske skee ksee ekse kese seke eske skee ksee ekse kese eeks eeks ekes kees ekes kees
Note: these 'words' (valid or invalid) are all the permutations of the word seek. These words are obtained by scrambling the letters in seek.
From Middle English seken (also sechen, whence dialectal English seech), from Old English sēċan (compare beseech); from Proto-West Germanic *sōkijan, from Proto-Germanic *sōkijaną (“to seek”), from Proto-Indo-European *seh₂g- (“to seek out”).
Cognate with West Frisian sykje, Dutch zoeken, Low German söken, German suchen, Danish søge, Icelandic sækja, Norwegian Bokmål søke, Norwegian Nynorsk søkja, Swedish söka. The Middle English and later Modern English hard /k/ derives from Old English sēcð, the third person singular; the forms with /k/ were then reinforced by cognate Old Norse sǿkja.
seek (third-person singular simple present seeks, present participle seeking, simple past and past participle sought)
For more quotations using this term, see Citations:seek.
seek (plural seeks)
Borrowed from Middle Low German sêkhûs (“hospital”) (equivalent to sêk + hûs). From Proto-West Germanic *seuk, ultimately from Proto-Germanic *seukaz (“sick”). Compare German Siechenhaus (“infirmary”), English sickhouse.
seek (genitive seegi, partitive seeki)
Inherited from Proto-West Germanic *seuk, from Proto-Germanic *seukaz, from *seukaną (“to be sick”), further etymology is uncertain.
seek (masculine seeke, feminine seeke, comparative seeker, superlative et seekst) (German-based spelling)