boğunaq
Appearance
Salar
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Inherited from Common Turkic *bognuk (“stifling;”) from *bog- (“to strangle”).[1] Cognate with Karakhanid [script needed] (boğnaqlān-, “to get cloudy”), Chagatai [script needed] (boğnak, “rainless storm; muffled noise; stifling”), Azerbaijani boğanaq (“stifling air”), Turkish boğanak (“heavy rain”), boğunuk (“muffled noise”).
Pronunciation
[edit]- (Qingshui, Xunhua, Qinghai) IPA(key): [poːʁɨnɨχ]
- (Baizhuang, Xunhua, Qinghai) IPA(key): [poːɢɨnɑχ]
- (Ili, Yining, Xinjiang) IPA(key): [poʁunɑχ]
Noun
[edit]boğunaq
Derived terms
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Clauson, Gerard (1972) “boğnak”, in An Etymological Dictionary of pre-thirteenth-century Turkish, Oxford: Clarendon Press, page 316
- Yakup, Abdurishid (2002) “boğunaq”, in An Ili Salar Vocabulary: Introduction and a Provisional Salar-English Lexicon[1], Tokyo: University of Tokyo, →ISBN, page 62
- Tenishev, Edhem (1976) “boğunaq”, in Stroj salárskovo jazyká [Grammar of Salar], Moscow, page 451
- Ma, Chengjun, Han, Lianye, Ma, Weisheng (December 2010) “boğunaq”, in 米娜瓦尔 艾比布拉 (Minavar Abibra), editor, 撒维汉词典 (Sāwéihàncídiǎn) [Salar-Uyghur-Chinese dictionary] (in Chinese), 1st edition, Beijing, →ISBN, page 47
- 林莲云 [Lin Lianyun] (1985) “boğunaq”, in 撒拉语简志 [A Brief History of Salar][2], Beijing: 民族出版社: 琴書店, →OCLC, page 117