Uyghur edit

Other scripts
Perso-Arabic پاقا
Latin paqa
Cyrillic пақа

Etymology edit

From Proto-Turkic *b(i)āka (frog).[1]

Cognate with Old Uyghur [script needed] (baqa, frog);[2] Turkish bağa, Tatar бака (baqa), Kazakh бақа (baqa), Kumyk бакъа (baqa), Kyrgyz бака (baka), Southern Altai бака (baka), Tuvan пага (paga), Bashkir баҡа (baqa), Yakut баҕа (bağa, frog), Shor паға, Western Yugur paqa.

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

پاقا (paqa) (plural پاقىلار (paqilar))

  1. frog

References edit

  1. ^ Starostin, Sergei, Dybo, Anna, Mudrak, Oleg (2003) “*b(i)āka”, in Etymological dictionary of the Altaic languages (Handbuch der Orientalistik; VIII.8)‎[1], Leiden, New York, Köln: E.J. Brill
  2. ^ Nadeljajev, V. M.; Nasilov, D. M.; Tenišev, E. R.; Ščerbak, A. M., editors (1969), Drevnetjurkskij slovarʹ [Dictionary of Old Turkic] (in Russian), Leningrad: USSR Academy of Sciences, Nauka, page 82