ʾncyl

Middle Persian

Etymology

Unknown. Akin to Sogdian ʾncyr (anjēr, fig) and Northern Kurdish hejîr (fig).

Borrowed into Turkish incir, Sanskrit अञ्जीर (añjīra) and possibly into Middle Chinese 映日 (MC 'angX nyit) and 阿馹 (MC 'a nyit) (Laufer, 1967: 410).

Noun

ʾncyl • (/*anjīr/)

  1. fig

Descendants

  • Persian: انجیر (anjir)
    • Azerbaijani: əncir, incir
    • Chechen: инжир (inžir)
    • Gujarati: અંજીર (añjīr)
    • Ottoman Turkish: انجیر
    • Russian: инжир (inžir)
  • Sanskrit: अञ्जीर (añjīra)
  • Middle Chinese: 映日 (MC 'angX nyit), 阿馹 (MC 'a nyit), (possibly also) 阿駔 (MC 'a dzuX)

References

  • MacKenzie, D. N. (1971) “anjīr”, in A concise Pahlavi dictionary, London, New York, Toronto: Oxford University Press, page 10.
  • Gharib, B. (1995) “ʾncyr”, in Sogdian dictionary: Sogdian–Persian–English, Tehran: Farhangan Publications, page 37.
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.