User : Allahverdi Verdizade/dik-
Alternative recosntruction
edit
Adjective
edit
*dik-
vertical , upright
Descendants
edit
Old Turkic:
Karluk
Uyghur: تىك ( tik , “ steep, vertical ” )
Uzbek: tik ( “ vertical, upstanding ” )
Kipchak:
North Kipchak:
Bashkir: текә ( tekə , “ steep ” )
Tatar: текә ( tekä , “ steep ” )
West Kipchak:
Crimean Tatar: tik ( “ steep ” )
Karachay-Balkar: тик ( tik , “ steep ” )
Kumyk: тик ( tik , “ steep ” )
Central Kipchak:
Kazakh: тік ( tık , “ steep ” )
Karakalpak:
Nogai:
East Kipchak:
Kyrgyz: тик ( tik ) , тике ( tike , “ steep, vertical ” )
Southern Altai:
Oghuz
Azerbaijani: dik ( “ steep ” )
Gagauz: dik ( “ proud ” )
Turkish: dik
Turkmen: dik ( “ steep, vertical ” )
Siberian
South Siberian
Yenisei
Khakas:
Shor:
Western Yugur:
Sayan Turkic
*dik-
to put vertically
Descendants
edit
Old Turkic: 𐱅𐰃𐰚 ( tik- , “ to erect ” )
Oghur
Karluk
Karakhanid: [script needed] ( tikmēk , “ to plant; to sew; to stick in ” )
Kipchak: [script needed] ( kök )
North Kipchak:
Bashkir: тегеү ( tegew , “ to sew ” )
Tatar: тегү ( tegü , “ to sew ” )
West Kipchak:
Crimean Tatar: tıqmaq ( “ to shove in ” )
Karachay-Balkar: тигерге ( tigerge , “ to sew ” )
Karaim: тикмэк ( “ to sew ” )
Kumyk: тикмек ( tikmek , “ to sew; to build; to sting, to bite ” )
Central Kipchak:
Kazakh: тігу ( tıgu )
Karakalpak:
Nogai:
East Kipchak:
Kyrgyz: тик ( tik , “ to erect a yurt ” )
Southern Altai:
Oghuz
Azerbaijani: dikmək ( “ to lower; to bury, put into soil ” ) , tikmək ( “ to sew; to build; ” )
Gagauz: dikmää ( “ to plant; to sew; to set ” )
Turkish: dikmek
Turkmen:
Siberian
North Siberian:
Dolgan: тик ( “ to sew ” )
Yakut: тик ( tik , “ to sting, bite ” )
South Siberian
Yenisei
Khakas:
Shor:
Western Yugur:
Sayan Turkic
References
edit
Starostin, Sergei , Dybo, Anna , Mudrak, Oleg (2003 ) “*dik- ”, in Etymological dictionary of the Altaic languages (Handbuch der Orientalistik; VIII.8), Leiden, New York, Köln: E.J. Brill
Jegorov, V. G. (1964 ) “чик ”, in Etimologičeskij slovarʹ čuvašskovo jazyka [Etymological Dictionary of the Chuvash Language ] (in Russian), Cheboksary: Čuvašskoje knižnoje izdatelʹstvo, page 325
Nişanyan, Sevan (2002– ) “dikmek ”, in Nişanyan Sözlük
Clauson, Gerard (1972 ) “tık-”, in An Etymological Dictionary of pre-thirteenth-century Turkish , Oxford: Clarendon Press, page 466