йох
Mariupol Greek
editEtymology
editFrom Byzantine Greek ὄχι (ókhi), from Ancient Greek οὐχί (oukhí). Cognates include Greek όχι (óchi).
Probably also influenced by Urum йох (from Proto-Turkic *yōk).
Pronunciation
editParticle
editйох • (jox)
Conjunction
editйох • (jox)
Synonyms
edit- (no; not): дъэ (ðe)
References
edit- A. A. Diamantopulo-Rionis with D. L. Demerdzhi, A. M. Davydova-Diamantopulo, A. A. Shapurma, R. S. Kharabadot, and D. K. Patricha (2006) “йох”, in Румейско-русский и русско-румейский словарь пяти диалектов греков Приазовья, Mariupol, →ISBN
- G. A. Animica, M. P. Galikbarova (2013) Румеку глоса[1], Donetsk, page 71
Northern Khanty
editEtymology
editCognates include Eastern Khanty йоӽ (joḥ).
Pronunciation
editNoun
editйох (joh) (Kazym)
References
edit- Elena Skribnik, editor (2016), Ob-Ugric Database: analysed text corpora and dictionaries for less described Ob-Ugric dialects[2], University of Munich
- Solovar, V. N. (2014) “йох”, in Хантыйско-русский Словарь (казымский диалект) [Khanty-Russian Dictionary (Kazym Dialect)][3], Khanty-Mansiysk: ООО «ФОРМАТ», →ISBN, page 93
Categories:
- Mariupol Greek terms inherited from Byzantine Greek
- Mariupol Greek terms derived from Byzantine Greek
- Mariupol Greek terms inherited from Ancient Greek
- Mariupol Greek terms derived from Ancient Greek
- Mariupol Greek terms with IPA pronunciation
- Mariupol Greek lemmas
- Mariupol Greek particles
- Mariupol Greek conjunctions
- Northern Khanty terms with IPA pronunciation
- Northern Khanty lemmas
- Northern Khanty nouns
- Kazym Khanty
- kca-nor:People