Wikibooks. *ïgač (“tree”) (perhaps) Karluk: Karakhanid: يٖى (<span class="searchmatch">yī</span>) Siberian <span class="searchmatch">Turkic</span>: Orkhon <span class="searchmatch">Turkic</span>: 𐰃 (ï) Old Uyghur: 𐽰𐽶 (ʾy /ï/) Clauson, Gerard (1972)...
(ǰiir) Siberian: ⇒ Old <span class="searchmatch">Turkic</span>: 𐰘𐰃𐰘𐰇 (y²iy²ü, “eating”) Old Uyghur: [script needed] (ye-) Western Yugur: [script needed] (<span class="searchmatch">yi</span>-) North Siberian: Yakut:...
(accusative)”) (Old <span class="searchmatch">Turkic</span>) Synonym: *-ig (Old <span class="searchmatch">Turkic</span>) Old <span class="searchmatch">Turkic</span> instead uses an -ig variant that is entirely replaced by -ni by Middle <span class="searchmatch">Turkic</span>. *at (“horse”)...
Karakhanid: اٖیكْ (īg), يٖیكْ (yīg, yīk), یِكٖی (yigī, “spindle; thick”), یٖی (<span class="searchmatch">yī</span>, “spindle; thick”) ⇒ Karakhanid: يٖيجٖى (yīčī, “tailor”) Kipchak: Kipchak:...
smelly”); from <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-Ketic *īˑt, and also Kott -ît (“to smell”), although whether the Yeniseian forms are borrowings from or were loaned into <span class="searchmatch">Turkic</span> is difficult...
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...
If related to <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-<span class="searchmatch">Turkic</span> *kïptu (“scissors”), perhaps from earlier *kapïtï, although forms are difficult to reconcile. But also the evolution might be...