бармаҡ

Bashkir

Бармаҡ (sense 1).

Etymology

From Common Kypchak *barmaq (finger), from Proto-Turkic *barmak (finger).[1]

Cognate with Kazakh бармақ (barmaq), Kyrgyz бармак (barmak), Kumyk бармакъ (barmaq), Karachay-Balkar бармакъ (barmaq), Uzbek barmoq, Turkish parmak (finger); Khakas парбах (parbax, branchy, wide-branching (of a tree)).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [bɑrˈmɑq]
  • Hyphenation: бар‧маҡ

Noun

бармаҡ • (barmaq)

  1. (anatomy) finger
    Баш бармаҡ.
    Baş barmaq.
    Thumb.
    Заманалар етте: яныбыҙҙағы яҡшы тимерселәрсе һыңар ҡул бармаҡтары менән иҫәпләрлек.
    Zamanalar yette: yanıbıźźağı yaqşı timerselərse hıñar qul barmaqtarı menən iśəplərlek.
    The time has come: good blacksmiths in our vicinity can (now) be counted on the fingers of one hand .
    Яңы версияла Touch ID технологияһы файҙаланыла, йәғни ҡушымтаға бармаҡ эҙҙәре ярҙамында инергә була.
    Yañı versiyala Touch ID texnologiyahı fayźalanıla, yəğni quşımtağa barmaq eźźəre yarźamında inergə bula.
    In the new version, Touch ID technology is used, so it is possible to log in to the application with the help of fingerprints.
  2. toe

Declension

Derived terms

References

  1. Starostin, Sergei, Dybo, Anna, Mudrak, Oleg (2003) “*biarŋak”, in Etymological dictionary of the Altaic languages (Handbuch der Orientalistik; VIII.8), Leiden, New York, Köln: E.J. Brill
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