ҫилӗм
Chuvash
Etymology 1
Inherited from Proto-Turkic *yẹlim (“glue”). Cognate with Uzbek yelim, Bashkir елем (yelem) and Yakut силим (silim)
Etymology 2
Inherited from Proto-Turkic *yïlïm (“seine”) via a form *yalïm.[1] Cognate with Bashkir йылым (yılım) and Yakut илим (ilim). Borrowed into Hungarian as gyalom.[2]
References
- Agyágasi, Klára (2019) Chuvash Historical Phonetics (Turcologica; 117), Wiesbaden: Harrssowitz, page 44
- Róna-Tas, András, Berta, Árpád, Károly, László (2011) West Old Turkic: Turkic Loanwords in Hungarian (Turcologica; 84), volume I, Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, pages 364-365
- Jegorov, V. G. (1964) “ҫилӗм”, in Etimologičeskij slovarʹ čuvašskovo jazyka [Etymological Dictionary of the Chuvash Language] (in Russian), Cheboksary: Čuvašskoje knižnoje izdatelʹstvo, page 213
- Fedotov, M. R. (1996) “ҫилӗм”, in Etimologičeskij slovarʹ čuvašskovo jazyka [Etymological Dictionary of the Chuvash Language] (in Russian), volume II, Cheboksary: Chuvash State Institute of Humanities, page 118
Further reading
- “ҫилӗм”, in Электронлă сăмахсар (overall work in Russian and Chuvash), 1996.
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.