Pêvek:Etîmolojiya peyvên zazakî/T

Ji Wîkîferhengê

ABCÇDEÊFGHIÎJKLMNOPQRSŞTUÛVWXYZ



  • teng: from PIE base *tenk- "to become firm, curdle, thicken."
Cognates: cf. Middle Persian tang "tight," Sanskrit tanc "to draw together, contract;" Irish techt "curdled, coagulated," Lithuanian tankus "close, tight," Old English meteþiht "stout from eating," Middle High German dihte "dense, thick;" German dicht "dense, tight;" Old High German gidigan, German gediegen "genuine, solid, worthy."
English Cognate: tight
Source: Etymonline, Cheung


  • tersayiş: from PIE base *tres- "to tremble."
Cognates: cf. Avestan tarshta "feared, revered," Sanskrit trasati "trembles," Greek treëin "to tremble," Lithuanian triseti "to tremble," Middle Irish tarrach "timid" Latin terribilis "frightful," from terrere "fill with fear."
English Cognate: terrible (from Old French), terror (from Old French), tremor (from Old French), terrific (from Latin),
Source: Etymonline, Cheung


  • teyşan, teyşun: from PIE base *ters- "dry."
Cognates: cf. Avestan tarshu- "dry, solid," Sanskrit tarsayati "dries up," Greek teresesthai "to become or be dry," Latin torrere "dry up, parch," Gothic þaursus "dry, barren," O High German thurri, German dürr, Old English þyrre "dry;" Old English þurstig "thirsty"
English Cognate: thirsty, terrain (from French), territory (from Latin),
Source: Etymonline, Cheung, Nişanyan


  • tîc, tîj: from PIE base *(s)teig- "to sting, stab."
Cognates: cf. Avestan taeça-/taeja- "sharp, pointed," tighri- "arrow," tigra "ray of ligt;" Old Persian tigra- "sharp, pointed;" Latin in-stigare "to goad;" Greek stizein "to prick, puncture," stigma "mark made by a pointed instrument;" Lithuanian stingu "to remain in place;" Russian stegati "to quilt" Old Frisian steka, Dutch stecken, Old High German stehhan, German stechen "to stab, prick."
English Cognate: stick, sting, stigma (from Greek) astigmatism (from Greek),
Source: Etymonline, Cheung, Nişanyan


  • tirş: from PIE base *ters- "dry."
Please see the "teyşan, teyşun" entry.



  • tix: from PIE base *(s)teig- "to sting, stab."
Please see the "tic, tij" entry.



  • toxim, tom, tum: from PIE base *teuk- "seed, family, lineage, tribe"
Cognates: cf. Avestan taoχman-, teoma "seed, family;" Old Persian tauma- "family, tribe;" Sanskrit tokám "lineage," New Persian toxm "seed."
English Cognate: N/A
Source: Nişanyan


Çavkanî
  • Cheung, Johnny. Etymological Dictionary of the Iranian Verb. Boston: Brill. 2007.
  • Etymonline. Online English Etymology Dictionary. <etymonline.com> by Douglas Harper.
  • Fortson, Benjamin W. Indo-European Language and Culture. Blackwell Publishing. 2004.
  • Nisanyan, Sevan. Etymological Dictionary of Modern Turkish. Adam Y. Istanbul 2007.
  • Watkins, Calvert. The American Heritage Dictionary of Indo-European Roots. Second Ed. Houghton Publishing. USA 2007.