Old Punjabi

edit

Etymology

edit

Inherited from Sanskrit चिक्क (cikka).

Noun

edit

چِکّڑ (cikkaṛ) (Gurmukhi ਚਿੱਕੜ)

  1. mud

References

edit
  • چکڑ”, in Kalam Baba Farid, Bait (or page) 4, 12th Century.

Punjabi

edit

Etymology

edit

First attested as Old Punjabi چِکّڑ (cikkaṛ), itself inherited from Sanskrit चिक्क (cikka). Compare Hindustani چِیکَٹ (cīkaṭ) / चीकट (cīkaṭ), Sindhi چِڪَڙُ / चिकड़ु, Gujarati ચીક (cīk), Marathi चीक (cīk).

Pronunciation

edit

Noun

edit

چِکَّڑ (cikkaṛm (Gurmukhi spelling ਚਿੱਕੜ)

  1. mud, dirt
  2. mire
  3. sludge, slime

Declension

edit
Declension of چکڑ
dir. sg. چِکَّڑ (cikkaṛ)
dir. pl. چِکَّڑ (cikkaṛ)
singular plural
direct چِکَّڑ (cikkaṛ) چِکَّڑ (cikkaṛ)
oblique چِکَّڑ (cikkaṛ) چِکَّڑاں (cikkaṛāṉ)
vocative چِکَّڑا (cikkaṛā) چِکَّڑو (cikkaṛo)
ablative چِکَّڑوں (cikkaṛoṉ)
locative چِکَّڑے (cikkaṛe) چِکَّڑِیں (cikkaṛīṉ)
instrumental چِکَّڑے (cikkaṛe) چِکَّڑِیں (cikkaṛīṉ)

References

edit
  • چکڑ”, in Punjabi-English Dictionary, Patiala: Punjabi University, 2024
  • Iqbal, Salah ud-Din (2002) “چِکّڑ”, in vaḍḍī panjābī lughat‎ (in Punjabi), Lahore: ʻAzīz Pablisharz
  • Turner, Ralph Lilley (1969–1985) “cikka2”, in A Comparative Dictionary of the Indo-Aryan Languages, London: Oxford University Press