چاقر
Appearance
Ottoman Turkish
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Proto-Turkic *čakïr (“light grey, greyish blue”). Cognate with Karakhanid [script needed] (čaqïr, “blue, grey (of eyes)”), Kazakh шағыр (şağyr, “blue/grey eyes”), Bashkir шағыр (şağır, “whitish”), etc.
The senses ”wine, intoxicating drink” seems to have a different etymology. Cognate with Kipchak [script needed] (čager, “wine”) (attested in Codex Cumanicus), Turkmen çakyr (“wine”), Azerbaijani çaxır (“wine”), etc.
Adjective
[edit]چاقر • (çakır)
Noun
[edit]چاقر • (çakır)
- wine, any intoxicating drink
- a clattering sound
- merlin, stone falcon
Derived terms
[edit]- چاقرجه (çakırca)
- چاقرجی (çakırcı)
- چاقر پنچه (çakır pençe)
- چاقر چوقور (çakır çukur)
- چاقر دكنی (çakır dikeni)
- چاقر طوغان (çakır doğan)
- چاقر قنات (çakır kanat)
- چاقر كوز (çakır göz)
- چاقر كیف (çakır keyf)
Descendants
[edit]- Turkish: çakır
- → Armenian: չախըռ (čʻaxəṙ)
- → Greek: τσακίρης (tsakíris, “blue-eyed, or blue-gray”), τσακίρικος (tsakírikos, “blue-eyed, or blue-gray; attractive”)
Further reading
[edit]- Redhouse, James W. (1890) “706”, in A Turkish and English Lexicon[1], Constantinople: A. H. Boyajian, page 705
- Kélékian, Diran (1911) “چاقر”, in Dictionnaire turc-français[2], Constantinople: Mihran, page 461