აზჲატსკი

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Laz

Alternative forms

Etymology

Borrowed from Russian азиа́тский (aziátskij, Asian).

Noun

აზჲატსკი (azyaťsǩi) (Latin spelling azyaťsǩi) (Arkabi)

  1. men's knee-length boots worn when dancing horon
    • 1930 – 1931, Niyazi Ahmet Banoğlu, Stories recorded by Georges Dumézil in Istanbul The clothing of the Laz:[1]
      ჰაჯინერ დელიკანლეფექ ჰემ დოლოქუნუ მეტკოჩეს დო ბათუმურ ბიჭეფესთერ დოლიქუნამან. კუჩხეს აზჲატსკი მოდვალერ ქილოტ ფანტალონ დო ავჯი-ჩექეთ დოლიქუნამან.
      haciner deliǩanlepek hem dolokunu meťǩoçes do batumur biç̌epester dolikunaman. ǩuçxes azyaťsǩi modvaler kiloť panťalon do avci-çeket dolikunaman.
      The young people of today have left these clothes and dress like the young people of Batum. They put on "aziatski" boots and wear breeches or trousers and a hunting jacket.

Descendants

  • Turkish: azaski

References

  • Bucaklişi, İsmail Avcı, Uzunhasanoğlu, Hasan, Aleksiva, Irfan (2007) “ażanżgi”, in Büyük Lazca Sözlük / Didi Lazuri Nenapuna (in Turkish), Istanbul: Chiviyazıları, page 52a
  • Šengelia, Eter (2010) Samoseltan daḳavširebuli leksiḳa megrul-lazurši (isṭoriul-šedarebiti analizi) (in Georgian), Tbilisi: University Press, page 50
  1. ^ Dumézil, Georges (1937) Contes lazes (Travaux et mémoires de l'Institut d'ethnologie; 27)‎ (in French), Paris: Institut d'Ethnologie, page 127