Russian edit

 
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Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

Attested since the middle of the 17th century. Related to кибита́ (kibitá, arched hoop, half of a hoop of a large fish-trap), obsolete (17th c.) киби́ть (kibítʹ, arc of the bow). Cognate with Ukrainian киби́тка (kybýtka), Belarusian кібі́тка (kibítka).

Borrowed from Turkic: compare Tatar кибет (kibet), Bashkir кибет (kibet), Kipchak [script needed] (kebit), [script needed] (kibit), [script needed] (kabit, stall, shop), Karakhanid [script needed] (käbit, inn).

Probably ultimately from Sogdian [script needed] (qpyδ /⁠kəpēδ⁠/, stall) (akin to Persian کلبه (kolbe); see it for more), though Arabic قُبَّة (qubba, dome) too is often mentioned as another possible ultimate source.

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

киби́тка (kibítkaf inan (genitive киби́тки, nominative plural киби́тки, genitive plural киби́ток)

  1. kibitka (horse-drawn carriage)
  2. yurt, kibitka (nomad's dwelling of some ethnic groups such as the Kalmyks and Kyrgyz)
  3. telega or sleigh with a (usually rounded) cover over the passenger seats

Declension edit

Derived terms edit

Related terms edit

Descendants edit

  • Czech: kibitka
  • English: kibitka
  • French: kibick
  • Polish: kibitka
  • Romanian: chibitcă

References edit