kayın
See also: Kayın
Turkish edit
Pronunciation edit
Etymology 1 edit
From Ottoman Turkish قاین (kayın), from Proto-Turkic *kadïŋ (“birch tree”). Compare Old Turkic [script needed] (kadıŋ), Uzbek qayin (“birch tree”), Kyrgyz кайың (kayıŋ), Kazakh қайың (qaiyñ), Yakut хатыҥ (qatıñ) etc.
Adjective edit
kayın
Noun edit
kayın (definite accusative kayını, plural kayınlar)
Etymology 2 edit
From Ottoman Turkish قاین (kayn, kayın, “wife's brother”), from Proto-Turkic *kādïn (“relative-in-law”). Unrelated to kadın, hatun.
Noun edit
kayın (definite accusative kaynı, plural kayınlar)
- -in-law
- brother-in-law
- Synonym: kayınbirader
Declension edit
Derived terms edit
- kaynana (“mother-in-law”)
- kaynata (“father-in-law”)
- kayınbirader (“brother-in-law”)
Etymology 3 edit
See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.
Verb edit
kayın