Reconstruction:Proto-Iranian/cárguš

This Proto-Iranian entry contains reconstructed terms and roots. As such, the term(s) in this entry are not directly attested, but are hypothesized to have existed based on comparative evidence.

Proto-Iranian edit

Etymology edit

From Proto-Indo-Iranian *ćárguš (predatory animal).

Noun edit

*cárguš m[1]

  1. lion

Descendants edit

  • Northeastern Iranian:
    • Khotanese: 𑀲𑀭𑁅 (sarau)
    • Sogdo-Bactrian:
  • Northwestern Iranian:
    • Kurdish:
      Central Kurdish: شێر (şêr)
      Northern Kurdish: şêr
      Southern Kurdish: شێر (şêr)
    • Proto-Medo-Parthian:
      • Caspian:
      • Old Median:
        • Kermanic:
          • Kermani, Zoroastrian Dari: شیر (šīr)
        • Old Azari: شیر (šēr~šīr)
          • Azerbaijani: (/⁠šīr⁠/)
            Arabic script: شیر
            Latin script: şir
      • Parthian:
        Manichaean script: 𐫢𐫃𐫡 (šgr /⁠šaɣr⁠/)
      • Zaza-Gorani:
  • Southwestern Iranian:
    • Old Persian: *šarguš
      • Early Middle Persian: (/⁠šaɣr⁠/)
        Manichaean script: 𐫢𐫃𐫡 (šgr)
        Book Pahlavi script: [Book Pahlavi needed] (šgr)
        • Late Middle Persian:
          Book Pahlavi script: [Book Pahlavi needed] (šyr /⁠šēr⁠/)
          • Classical Persian: شیر (šêr)
            • Dari: شیر (šêr)
            • Iranian Persian: شیر (šîr)
            • Tajik: шер (šer)
            • Baluchi: شیر (šēr)
            • Hindustani:
            • Pashto: شېر (šēr)
            • Turkic: /šēr ~ šīr/
              • Ottoman Turkish: شیر (şîr)
              • Turkmen: şir (šīr)
              • Uzbek: sher (šēr) (via Tajiki dialect)
          • ? Old Chinese: (OC *sri, “lion”)

References edit

  1. ^ Witzel, Michael (2003) Linguistic Evidence for Cultural Exchange in Prehistoric Western Central Asia (Sino-Platonic Papers; 129)‎[1], Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania, Department of East Asian Languages and Civilizations, page 14