See also: شیر, سير, and ـسز

Central Kurdish

edit

Noun

edit

سیر (sîr)

  1. garlic

Khowar

edit

Etymology

edit

From Sanskrit सेतु (sétu, bridge), from Proto-Indo-Iranian *sHáytuš.

Noun

edit

سیر (ser)

  1. bridge

References

edit
  • Elena Bashir, Maula Nigah, Rahmat Karim Baig (2005) “سیر”, in A digital Khowar-English dictionary with audio, Chicago: South Asia Language and Area Center, University of Chicago.

Ottoman Turkish

edit

Etymology 1

edit

Borrowed from Arabic سَيْر (sayr).

Noun

edit

سیر (seyr)

  1. motion
  2. show, spectacle
Derived terms
edit
Descendants
edit
  • Turkish: seyir

Etymology 2

edit

Borrowed from Persian سیر (sir, garlic).

Noun

edit

سیر (sir)

  1. garlic
Descendants
edit

Etymology 3

edit

Borrowed from Persian سیر (sir, satiated).

Adjective

edit

سیر (sir)

  1. full, satiated

References

edit
  • Redhouse, J. W., Wells, Charles (1880) “سیر”, in Redhouse's Turkish Dictionary, in Two Parts, English and Turkish, and Turkish and English, 2nd edition, London: Bernard Quartch, 15 Piccadilly, page 607b

Persian

edit

Etymology 1

edit

Cognate with Northern Kurdish têr.

Pronunciation

edit
 

Readings
Classical reading? sēr
Dari reading? sēr
Iranian reading? sir
Tajik reading? ser

Noun

edit
Dari سیر
Iranian Persian
Tajik сер

سیر (sir)

  1. full, satiated, sated

Etymology 2

edit

Inherited from Proto-Indo-European; in Middle Persian [Book Pahlavi needed] (syl) or Aramaic heterogram [script needed] (TWMʾ); often claimed to come from an Old Persian *θigraʰ, only imagined to be reflected in the month name Old Persian 𐎰𐎠𐎡𐎥𐎼𐎨𐎡𐏁 (Θāigraciš, literally *the month of garlic-collecting), while another suggestion sees the full term rather reflected by Proto-Turkic *sarmïsak (garlic) borrowed from Iranian.

Pronunciation

edit
 

Readings
Classical reading? sīr
Dari reading? sīr
Iranian reading? sir
Tajik reading? sir

Noun

edit
Dari سیر
Iranian Persian
Tajik сир

سیر (sir)

  1. garlic
Descendants
edit

See also

edit

Further reading

edit

Urdu

edit

Etymology

edit

Borrowed from Classical Persian سیر (sayr), from Arabic سَيْر (sayr).

Pronunciation

edit

Noun

edit

سیر (sairf (Hindi spelling सैर)

  1. tour
  2. journey

Declension

edit
Declension of سیر
singular plural
direct سیر (sair) سیریں (sairẽ)
oblique سیر (sair) سیروں (sairõ)
vocative سیر (sair) سیرو (sairo)

Derived terms

edit

Ushojo

edit

Etymology

edit

From Urdu سیر (ser).

Noun

edit

سیر (ser)

  1. walk
  2. 1200 grams