Ottoman Turkish

edit
 
دوه

Etymology

edit

Inherited from Proto-Turkic *tebe; cognate with Azerbaijani dəvə, Bashkir дөйә (döyə), Chuvash тӗве (tĕve), Kazakh түйе (tüie), Kyrgyz төө (töö), Turkmen düýe, Uyghur تۆگە (töge) and Uzbek tuya.

Noun

edit

دوه (deve)

  1. camel, any beast of burden of the genus Camelus
    Synonym: شتر (şütür)

Derived terms

edit

Descendants

edit
  • Gagauz: devä
  • Turkish: deve
  • Albanian: deve
  • Armenian: դավա (dava)
  • Northern Kurdish: deve
  • Serbo-Croatian:
    Cyrillic script: дева
    Latin script: deva

Further reading

edit

Pashto

edit
Pashto cardinal numbers
 <  ١ ٢ ٣  > 
    Cardinal : دوه

Etymology

edit

From Proto-Pathan *dwa, from an ancestral Middle Iranian form *dwa,[1] from Proto-Iranian *dwáH (compare Persian دو (do), Pashto دوه (dwa), Avestan 𐬛𐬎𐬎𐬀 (duua)), from Proto-Indo-Iranian *dwáH (compare Sanskrit द्व (dvá), Hindi दो (do)/Urdu دو (do), Punjabi ਦੋ (do)), from Proto-Indo-European *dwóh₁ (compare Russian два (dva), Lithuanian du, Greek δύο (dýo), Spanish dos, English two).

Pronunciation

edit
  • IPA(key): /dwa/
  • Audio:(file)

Noun

edit

دوه (dwa)

  1. two

References

edit
  1. ^ Julian Kreidl (2021) “Lambdacism and the development of Old Iranian *t in Pashto”, in Iran and the Caucasus