See also: فنك

Persian

edit

Etymology

edit

    Borrowed from a Southern Mongolic dialect of Middle Mongol ancestral to Mongghul funige (fox), from Proto-Mongolic *hünegen (fox).

    Pronunciation

    edit
     

    Readings
    Classical reading? fanak
    Dari reading? fanak
    Iranian reading? fanak
    Tajik reading? fanak

    Noun

    edit

    فنک (fanak)

    1. fennec
    2. (obsolete) marten

    Descendants

    edit
    • Arabic: فَنَك (fanak), فَنَج (fanaj) (see there for further descendants)

    References

    edit
    • Vullers, Johann August (1856–1864) “فنک”, 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[1] (in Latin), volume II, Gießen: J. Ricker, page 694
    • Wikander, Stig (1968) “A Central Asian Loanword in Arthaśāstra”, in J. C. Heesterman, G. H. Schokker, V. I. Subramoniam, editors, Pratidanam: Indian, Iranian, and Indo-European studies presented to Franciscus Bernardus Jacobus Kuiper on his sixtieth birthday (Janua Linguarum. Series Maior)‎[2], volume 34, The Hague · Paris: Mouton, →DOI, →ISBN, page 272 fn. 11