(păh̬ăr) <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-Common <span class="searchmatch">Turkic</span>: *<span class="searchmatch">bakïr</span> Oghuz: <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-Oghuz: *<span class="searchmatch">bakïr</span> Old Anatolian Turkish: [script needed] (baqır) Azerbaijani: paxır Gagauz: <span class="searchmatch">bakır</span> Ottoman...
*yeŕ copper, brass *<span class="searchmatch">bakïr</span> Oghur: → <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-Mongolic: *jer ⇒ Classical Mongolian: ᠵᠡᠷ ᠵᠡᠪᠰᠡᠭ (ǰer ǰebseg, “weapons”) ⇒ Mongolian: зэр зэвсэг (zer zevseg,...
into disuse in many modern <span class="searchmatch">Turkic</span> languages. 3) Plurality in <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-<span class="searchmatch">Turkic</span> is disputed. See also the notes on the <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-<span class="searchmatch">Turkic</span>/Locative-ablative case and...
end that <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-Mongolic *čïlaxun (earlier *čïlapun, which would point to a verb instead) may simply be an ancient loanword from <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-<span class="searchmatch">Turkic</span>, rather than...
Karl Heinrich Menges proposed borrowing from some <span class="searchmatch">Turkic</span> language, ultimately from <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-<span class="searchmatch">Turkic</span> *<span class="searchmatch">bakïr</span> (“copper”). *bagrъ (East and South Slavic) purple...
Nişanyan and Doerfer postulates that the <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-<span class="searchmatch">Turkic</span> word comes from an earlier *tuwuz (*tubuŕ), explaining the aberrant forms of Chuvash тӑвар (tăvar)...
into disuse in many modern <span class="searchmatch">Turkic</span> languages. 3) Plurality in <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-<span class="searchmatch">Turkic</span> is disputed. See also the notes on the <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-<span class="searchmatch">Turkic</span>/Locative-ablative case and...
) ⇒ Arin: taːmbagɨr (“brass”) (cf. <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-<span class="searchmatch">Turkic</span> *<span class="searchmatch">bakïr</span> (“copper”)) ⇒ Arin: tamkorgolči (“tin”) (cf. <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-<span class="searchmatch">Turkic</span> *korguĺčïn (“lead”)) ⇒ Arin: taːmouši...
an unknown source to <span class="searchmatch">Turkic</span>, Sino-Tibetan and Austroasiatic languages. According to Bonmann and Fries, perhaps borrowed from <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-Yeniseian *xum ~ *wum...
into disuse in many modern <span class="searchmatch">Turkic</span> languages. 3) Plurality in <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-<span class="searchmatch">Turkic</span> is disputed. See also the notes on the <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-<span class="searchmatch">Turkic</span>/Locative-ablative case and...