qonşu
Azerbaijani edit
Cyrillic | гоншу | |
---|---|---|
Abjad | قونشو |
Etymology edit
Inherited from Old Anatolian Turkish قُنكشٖی (qoñşi),[1] ultimately from Proto-Turkic *kon- (“neighbour; friend; guest”), whence also Azerbaijani qonaq (“guest”). Compare Turkish komşu, Uzbek qoʻshni, Turkmen goňşy, Kyrgyz кошуна (koşuna, “guest”), Kumyk хоншу (xonşu).
Pronunciation edit
Noun edit
qonşu (definite accusative qonşunu, plural qonşular)
- neighbour
- qapı qonşusu, qapıbir qonşusu ― nextdoor neighbour
- 2010, 14 April, Əli İldırımoğlu, “Daş yağan gün”, in 525-ci qəzet, page 6:
- Zərişi əvvəlcə qapıbir qonşusu olan Bayram adlı oğlan istəyirmiş.
- At first, the next-door neighbor, a boy named Bayram, wanted to marry Zarish.
Declension edit
Declension of qonşu | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
singular | plural | |||||||
nominative | qonşu |
qonşular | ||||||
definite accusative | qonşunu |
qonşuları | ||||||
dative | qonşuya |
qonşulara | ||||||
locative | qonşuda |
qonşularda | ||||||
ablative | qonşudan |
qonşulardan | ||||||
definite genitive | qonşunun |
qonşuların |
Derived terms edit
Descendants edit
Adjective edit
qonşu (comparative daha qonşu, superlative ən qonşu)
- neighboring, neighbour
- qonşu ölkə ― neighboring country
References edit
- ^ Gölpınarlı, Abdülbâki (1934) “qonşu”, in Yunus Emre’de Öz Türkçe Kelimeler [Native Turkic words in Yunus Emre], volume 4
Further reading edit
- “qonşu” in Obastan.com.