Reconstruction:Proto-Turkic/sāb

This Proto-Turkic 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-Turkic edit

Noun edit

*sāb

  1. word, speech

Declension edit

Descendants edit

  • Oghur:
    • Chuvash: сӑвӑ (săvă)
    • Proto-Ugric: *sawɜ
      • Hungarian: szó
      • Mansi:
      • Khanty:
        • Northern Khanty: сӑв (săw) (Obdorsk)
  • Common Turkic: *sāb
  • Karluk:
  • Oghuz: ساڤْجىٖ (sāvčï, ambassador, envoy)[2]
    • Old Anatolian Turkish: ساو
      • Azerbaijani: söz-sov (gossip; discontent)
      • Ottoman Turkish: ساو (sav)
        • Turkish: sav (gossip, conversation, news) (dial.)
        • Turkish: sav (contention; theorem; proposition; thesis; argument, allegation, claim; assertion), savcı
    • Salar: sōcı
    • Turkmen: sāw, sāwçy
  • Siberian:
    • Southern Siberian:
      • Old Turkic: [script needed] (sab)

References edit

  1. ^ al-Kashgarî, Mahmud (1072–1074) Besim Atalay, transl., Divanü Lûgat-it-Türk Tercümesi [Translation of the “Compendium of the languages of the Turks] (Türk Dil Kurumu Yayınları; 521) (in Turkish), 1985 edition, Ankara: Türk Tarih Kurmu Basımevi, published 1939–1943, page 441
  2. ^ al-Kashgarî, Mahmud (1072–1074) Besim Atalay, transl., Divanü Lûgat-it-Türk Tercümesi [Translation of the “Compendium of the languages of the Turks] (Türk Dil Kurumu Yayınları; 521) (in Turkish), 1985 edition, Ankara: Türk Tarih Kurmu Basımevi, published 1939–1943, page 441
  • Räsänen, Martti (1969) Versuch eines etymologischen Wörterbuchs der Türksprachen (in German), Helsinki: Suomalais-ugrilainen seura, page 391a
  • Levitskaja, L. S., Blagova, G. F., Dybo, A. V., Nasilov, D. M., Pocelujevskij, Je. A. (2003) “са:в”, in Etimologičeskij slovarʹ tjurkskix jazykov [Etymological Dictionary of Turkic Languages] (in Russian), volume VII, Moscow: Vostočnaja literatura, pages 136-137
  • Starostin, Sergei, Dybo, Anna, Mudrak, Oleg (2003) “*sāb”, in Etymological dictionary of the Altaic languages (Handbuch der Orientalistik; VIII.8)‎[1], Leiden, New York, Köln: E.J. Brill