Ottoman Turkish edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

From Persian تفتیک (taftik). See Turkish tiftik for more.

Noun edit

تفتیك (tiftik)

  1. mohair, angora wool
  2. lint
    تفتیك ایتمكtiftin etmekto fray
  3. (surgery) charpie

Derived terms edit

Descendants edit

See also edit

References edit

  • Abajev, V. I. (1979) Историко-этимологический словарь осетинского языка [Historical-Etymological Dictionary of the Ossetian Language] (in Russian), volume III, Moscow and Leningrad: Academy Press, page 296
  • Çağbayır, Yaşar (2007) “تفتیك”, in Ötüken Türkçe Sözlük (in Turkish), volume 5, Istanbul: Ötüken Neşriyat, page 4822
  • Dehkhoda, Ali-Akbar (1931–) “تفتیک”, in Dehkhoda Dictionary Institute, editors, Dehkhoda Dictionary (in Persian), Tehran: University of Tehran Press
  • Eren, Hasan (1999) “تفتیك”, in Türk Dilinin Etimolojik Sözlüğü [Etymological Dictionary of the Turkish Language] (in Turkish), Ankara: Bizim Büro Basım Evi, pages 407–408
  • Kélékian, Diran (1911) “تفتیك”, in Dictionnaire turc-français[1], Constantinople: Mihran, page 385
  • Kerestedjian, Bedros (1912) Kerest Haig, editor, Quelques matériaux pour un dictionnaire étymologique de la langue Turque (in French), London: Luzac & Co., page 142
  • Lokotsch, Karl (1927) Etymologisches Wörterbuch der europäischen Wörter orientalischen Ursprungs (in German), Heidelberg: Carl Winter’s Universitätsbuchhandlung, § 2076, page 162
  • Nişanyan, Sevan (2002–) “tiftik”, in Nişanyan Sözlük
  • Redhouse, James W. (1890) “تفتك”, in A Turkish and English Lexicon[2], Constantinople: A. H. Boyajian, page 569
  • Avery, Robert et al., editors (2013), The Redhouse Dictionary Turkish/Ottoman English, 21st edition, Istanbul: Sev Yayıncılık, →ISBN
  • Schrader, Otto (1890) Frank Byron Jevons, transl., Prehistoric antiquities of the Aryan peoples: a manual of comparative philology and the earliest culture, London: Charles Griffin and Company, page 330
  • Vullers, Johann August (1855) “تفتیک”, in Lexicon Persico-Latinum etymologicum cum linguis maxime cognatis Sanscrita et Zendica et Pehlevica comparatum, e lexicis persice scriptis Borhâni Qâtiu, Haft Qulzum et Bahâri agam et persico-turcico Farhangi-Shuûrî confectum, adhibitis etiam Castelli, Meninski, Richardson et aliorum operibus et auctoritate scriptorum Persicorum adauctum[3] (in Latin), volume I, Gießen: J. Ricker, pages 449b–450a