Russian edit

Etymology edit

Supposed by Moscow circle philologers Proto-Slavic *drynъ, as also found in a dialectal Ukrainian дрін (drin); were it so, it would probably be borrowed from a descendant of Proto-Indo-Iranian *dráwnam, however the word is not even attested before the 20th century, but entered argots, internet corners and political discourse from Soviet-era regiolects, so can be presumed to be an expressive formation from драть (dratʹ), like in the 18th already was formed дрянь (drjanʹ).

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

дрын (drynm inan (genitive дры́на, nominative plural дры́ны, genitive plural дры́нов)

  1. (also figuratively) cudgel
  2. (vulgar) fuckpoletallywhacker, truncheon

Declension edit

References edit

  • Trubachyov, Oleg, editor (1978), “*drynъ”, in Этимологический словарь славянских языков [Etymological dictionary of Slavic languages] (in Russian), numbers 5 (*dělo – *dьržьlь), Moscow: Nauka, page 145
  • Шапошников, Александр Константинович (2007) “Сарматские и туранские языковые реликты Северного Причерноморья”, in Этимология (2003-2005). К 75-летию О. Н. Трубачева[1] (in Russian), page 279
  • Филин, Ф. П., editor (1972), “дрын”, in Slovarʹ russkix narodnyx govorov [Dictionary of Russian Dialects] (in Russian), volume 8, Leningrad: Nauka, Leningrad branch, page 222