lškl
Middle Persian
editEtymology
editFrom Proto-Indo-Iranian *Hrakš-, from Proto-Indo-European *h₂lek-s- (“to protect”). Compare Sanskrit रक्षति (rakṣati).
Noun
editlškl • (laškar)
Derived terms
edit- lšklyk' (laškarīg, “soldier”)
Descendants
edit- Persian: لشکر (laškar), لشگر (lašgar) (nonstandard)
- Sylheti: ꠟꠡ꠆ꠇꠞ (lośxor)
- → Indonesian: laskar
- → Middle Armenian: լաշքար (laškʻar), լաշքեար (laškʻear)
- → Ottoman Turkish: لشكر (leşker)
- Turkish: leşker
- → Marwari: लसकर (laskar)
- → Zazaki: lezkar
- Andalusian Arabic: عَسْكَر
- → Classical Syriac: ܥܣܟܪ (ʿaskar)
- → Kamviri: askar
- → Persian: عسکر ('askar)
- → Ottoman Turkish: عسكر (asker)
- Turkish: asker
- → Azerbaijani: əsgər
- → Bashkir: ғәскәр (ğəskər)
- → Armenian: ասկեր (asker), ասքար (askʻar), ասկյար (askyar)
- → Bulgarian: аске́р (askér)
- → Crimean Tatar: asker
- → Greek: ασκέρι (askéri)
- ⇒ Indonesian: laskar
- → Kazakh: әскер (äsker)
- → Kyrgyz: аскер (asker)
- → Ladino: asker
- → Laz: ასქერი (askeri), ასკერი (asǩeri) — Atina, Vizha, Artasheni
- → Malay:
- → Macedonian: аскер (asker)
- ⇒ Northern Kurdish: leşker
- → Russian: аске́р (askér), эске́р (eskér)
- → Serbo-Croatian:
- → Tajik: аскар (askar)
- → Tatar: гаскәр (ğaskär)
- → Turkmen: esger
- → Uyghur: ئەسكەر (esker)
- → Uzbek: askar
- → Ottoman Turkish: عسكر (asker)
- → Polish: asker
- → Swedish: askar
- → Zazaki: esker
- Georgian: ლაშქარი (laškari)
References
edit- MacKenzie, D. N. (1971) “laškar”, in A concise Pahlavi dictionary, London, New York, Toronto: Oxford University Press