Chuvash edit

Etymology 1 edit

Noun edit

карман (karman)

  1. purse

Etymology 2 edit

Cognate with Turkish kermen.

Noun edit

карман (karman)

  1. castle

Moksha edit

Pronunciation edit

  This entry needs an audio pronunciation. If you are a native speaker with a microphone, please record this word. The recorded pronunciation will appear here when it's ready.

Verb edit

карман (karman)

  1. first-person singular present indicative of кармамс (karmams)

Russian edit

Etymology edit

Uncertain, a distorted word, with the р (r) presumably excrescent in compliance with Russian phonotactics, earlier гама́н (gamán, purse, wallet) which is still current usually in the extension гамане́ць (hamanécʹ) in Ukrainian; probably a Turkic borrowing, possibly with the Ukrainian and Southern Russian value /ɣ/ for г (g) specifically from (the early 18th-century version of) Chuvash хаман (haman, literally durable), also applied to fabrics and also to a skinbag, which would ultimately derive from Persian خام (xâm, raw, crude).

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): [kɐrˈman]
  • (file)

Noun edit

карма́н (karmánm inan (genitive карма́на, nominative plural карма́ны, genitive plural карма́нов, relational adjective карма́нный, diminutive карма́нчик or карма́шек)

  1. pocket
    У меня́ в карма́не блоха́ на арка́не!U menjá v karmáne bloxá na arkáne!I’m flat broke! (literally, “I have a flea on a lasso in my pocket!”)
  2. (computing) clipboard

Declension edit

Related terms edit

Descendants edit

  • Ingrian: kormuna

Further reading edit

  • Ačaṙean, Hračʿeay (1971) “գրապան”, in Hayerēn armatakan baṙaran [Armenian Etymological Dictionary] (in Armenian), 2nd edition, a reprint of the original 1926–1935 seven-volume edition, volume I, Yerevan: University Press, page 603a, derives from the Iranian source of Old Armenian գրապան (grapan)
  • Berneker, Erich (1908–1913) Slavisches etymologisches Wörterbuch (in German), volume I, Heidelberg: Carl Winter's Universitätsbuchhandlung, page 490
  • Miklosich, Franz (1890) “karman”, in Die türkischen Elemente in den südost- und osteuropäischen Sprachen (Denkschriften der Kaiserlichen Akademie der Wissenschaften. Philosophisch-Historische Classe)‎[1] (in German), volume 38, Wien: In Commission bei Carl Gerold’s Sohn