сапог

Bulgarian

Etymology

Inherited from Old Church Slavonic сапогъ (sapogŭ), with further origin unclear.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [sɐˈpɔk]

Noun

сапо́г • (sapóg) m

  1. (historical) old-style boot or rugged shoe

Declension

Coordinate terms

References

Russian

Alternative forms

Etymology

Inherited from Old East Slavic сапогъ (sapogŭ). Obscure etymology:

  • Per Vasmer, from сопе́ть (sopétʹ) + -ог (-og), compare сопе́ль (sopélʹ) 'wind instrument', 'pipe'. The modern Russian сапо́г means shoes with a high top, what explains the similarity with the pipe. This etymology encounters phonetic difficulties if we take into account сопе́ть (sopet') as a source, because Old East Slavic or Old Church Slavonic don't have the form *сопогъ.
  • Per Menges, Vahros and Trubachyov, from Turkic languages, compare Proto-Turkic *sараɣ-, *sарuɣ- 'shafted shoes', modern Turkic sap 'stem'. This etymology has the same phonetic problems as Vasmer's etymology. In this case, it should be *сопагъ (compare това́р (továr) from Turkic tavar or колпа́к (kolpák) from Turkic kalpak) or *сопугъ.[1] Semantic difficulties also arise, in Old Church Slavonic it means 'sandals', 'shoes with tops no higher than the ankles', Turkic source originally suggests high-top shoes.[2]
  • Per Lvov, from *sapati 'to tie, to bind'. According to Lvov and Semyonov, the original meaning is 'puttee, shoes, sandals',[3][4] compare dialectal сап (sap) 'fetters', colloquial заса́пить (zasápitʹ) 'tie in a knot'. In this case сапо́г from сап (sap) + -ог (-og).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [sɐˈpok]
  • (file)

Noun

сапо́г • (sapóg) m inan (genitive сапога́, nominative plural сапоги́, genitive plural сапо́г, relational adjective сапо́жный)

  1. boot
    боло́тные сапоги́bolótnyje sapogíwaders (high waterproof boots)

Declension

Descendants

  • Russenorsk: sabagof
  • Armenian: սապոգ (sapog)
  • Kildin Sami: са̄һпе (sāhp’e)
  • Kurdish:
    Northern Kurdish: sapok, sapong
  • Yup'ik: cap'akiq

See also

References

  1. https://www.ruslang.ru/doc/etymology/1967/19-l'vov.pdf
  2. https://www.ruslang.ru/doc/etymology/1967/19-l'vov.pdf
  3. Izmail Sreznevsky. Materials for the Dictionary of the Old Russian Language on the Basis of Written Records.
  4. https://www.ruslang.ru/doc/etymology/1967/19-l'vov.pdf

Further reading

  • Vasmer, Max (1964–1973) “сапог”, in Oleg Trubachyov, transl., Этимологический словарь русского языка [Etymological Dictionary of the Russian Language] (in Russian), Moscow: Progress
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