cork
n.
c.1300, from Spanish alcorque "cork sole," probably via Arabic and ultimately from Latin quercus "oak" (see Quercus) or cortex (genitive corticis) "bark" (see corium).
v.
1570s, "to put a cork sole on a shoe," from cork, n.). Meaning "to stop with a cork" is from 1640s. Related: Corked; corking.