саккӑр
Chuvash
| 80 | ||
| ← 7 | 8 | 9 → |
|---|---|---|
| Cardinal: саккӑр (sakkăr) Ordinal: саккӑрмӗш (sakkărmĕš) Distributive: сакӑршер (sak̬ărš̬er) | ||
Etymology
Inherited from Bulgar ڛَكِڔ (sekir, “eight”),[1] itself inherited from Proto-Turkic *sekiŕ.[2][3]
Cognate with Khalaj səkkiz, Turkish sekiz, Uzbek sakkiz, Bashkir һигеҙ (higeź) and Yakut аҕыс (ağıs).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [ˈsakːər]
References
- Tekin, Talât (1988) Volga Bulgar kitabeleri ve Volga Bulgarcası [Volga Bulgarian Ephitaphs and Volga Bulgarian Language] (in Turkish), Ankara: Türk Tarih Kurumu Basımevi, →ISBN, page 200
- Fedotov, M. R. (1996), “саккӑр”, in Etimologičeskij slovarʹ čuvašskovo jazyka [Etymological Dictionary of the Chuvash Language] (in Russian), volume II, Cheboksary: Chuvash State Institute of Humanities, pages 6-7
- Jegorov, V. G. (1964), “саккӑр”, in Etimologičeskij slovarʹ čuvašskovo jazyka [Etymological Dictionary of the Chuvash Language] (in Russian), Cheboksary: Čuvašskoje knižnoje izdatelʹstvo, page 175
Further reading
- “саккӑр”, in Электронлă сăмахсар (in Russian-Chuvash, Chuvash-Russian), 1996.
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.