Azerbaijani edit

Other scripts
Cyrillic вурмаг
Abjad وورماق

Etymology edit

Ultimately from Proto-Turkic *(h)ur-. Cognate with Old Turkic 𐰆𐰺 (ur-), Turkish vurmak, Uzbek urmak, etc.

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): /vurˈmɑx/
  • Hyphenation: vur‧maq

Verb edit

vurmaq

  1. (transitive) to hit, to pound, to beat
    şillə vurmaqto slap in the face
  2. (transitive) to shoot
    Synonym: atmaq
    • 2016 August, “Nardaran işi məhkəməsində: Polisi gözümün qabağında öz həmkarı vurdu [The Nardaran case in trial: The colleague of the police shot him in front of my eyes.]”, in Dosye.az[1]:
      Adətən belə hadisələrdə xəbərdarıq atəşi açırlar. Amma bunlar birbaşa bizə atdılar. Əkbərin sinəsindən vurdular
      Usually, a warning shot is fired in such cases. But they started shooting at us immediately. They shot Əkbər in his chest.
  3. (transitive) to stab
    Synonym: bıcaqlamaq
  4. (transitive) to multiply
    Synonym: zərb etmək
    dördü ikiyə vurmaqto multiply four by two
  5. (transitive) to apply (a color on a surface)
    saça rəng vurmaqto dye hair
    döymə vurmaqto make a tattoo
  6. (transitive, intransitive, slang) to drink alcohol
    Synonym: mıxlamaq
  7. (transitive, intransitive, colloquial, used with dative) to fill a vehicle (with fuel).
    Synonyms: tökmək, doldurmaq
    maşına benzin vurmaqto fill the car with gas
  8. Only used in özünü vurmaq (to pretend)
    Özünü xəstəliyə vurma!Don't pretend to be sick!

Conjugation edit

Derived terms edit

derived words
compound verbs
phrases

Descendants edit

  • Khalaj: vurmaq

Further reading edit

Khalaj edit

Perso-Arabic ووُرماق

Etymology edit

Borrowed from Azerbaijani vurmaq. Doublet of hurmaq.

Pronunciation edit

Verb edit

vurmaq (third-person singular aorist vurır, second person singular imperative vurı)

  1. to beat, to hit

Conjugation edit

References edit

  • Doerfer, Gerhard (1980) Wörterbuch des Chaladsch (Dialekt von Charrab) [Khalaj dictionary] (in German), Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó
  • Doerfer, Gerhard (1988) Grammatik des Chaladsch [Grammar of Khalaj] (in German), Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, →ISBN, →OCLC