Georgian edit

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): /tʼrikʼi/, [tʼɾikʼi]
  • Hyphenation: ტრი‧კი

Noun edit

ტრიკი (ṭriḳi) (plural ტრიკები)

  1. (dialectal, Guria, Imereti) bastard
    Synonyms: ნაბიჭვარი (nabič̣vari), ბუში (buši)

Inflection edit

.Georgian.inflection-table tr:hover
{
	background-color:#EBEBEB;
}

References edit

  • Ɣlonṭi, Aleksandre (1975) “ტრიკი”, in Kartul ḳilo-tkmata siṭq̇vis ḳona [Dictionary of dialectal Georgian words]‎[1] (in Georgian), volume II, Tbilisi: Academy Press, page 128b

Laz edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

Inherited from Proto-Georgian-Zan *ṭli(n)ḳ- (lower part of leg).

Noun edit

ტრიკი (ťriǩi) (Latin spelling ťriǩi) (Vitse–Arkabi, Khopa, Chkhala)

  1. leg
    Synonyms: პაჭა (p̌aç̌a), ფოლო (polo)
    ბოზოქ ტრიკი ქონობაძგუ
    bozok ťriǩi konobażgu
    The girl stepped on (to put leg on) something, moving her foot parallel to the ground

Further reading edit

  • Klimov, G. A. (1998) Etymological Dictionary of the Kartvelian Languages (Trends in linguistics. Documentation; 16), New York, Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter, page 190
  • Kojima, Gôichi (2012–) “t'rik'k'i/t'rik'i”, in Temel Lazca-Türkçe Sözlük Taslağı[2] (in Turkish)
  • Tandilava, Ali (2013) “ტრიკი”, in Merab Čuxua, Natela Kutelia, Lile Tandilava, Lali Ezugbaia, editors, Lazuri leksiḳoni [Laz Dictionary]‎[3], online version prepared by Levan Vašaḳiʒe, Tbilisi