چمشیر
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Ottoman Turkish
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Old Anatolian Turkish شمشاد (şimşad), from Persian شمشاد (šemšâd).
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]چمشیر • (çimşir)
Derived terms
[edit]- چمشیرلك (çimşirlik, “place of box; the prince-prison”)
Descendants
[edit]- Turkish: şimşir
- → Albanian: shimshir
- → Aromanian: šimšír
- → Bulgarian: чимши́р (čimšír), чемши́р (čemšír)
- → Greek: τσιμσίρι (tsimsíri), τσιμισίρι (tsimisíri)
- → Karachay-Balkar: шемсер (şemser)
- → Macedonian: шимшир (šimšir)
- → Romanian: cimișir, cimșir
- → Serbo-Croatian:
References
[edit]- Meninski, Franciszek à Mesgnien (1680) “چمشیر”, in Thesaurus linguarum orientalium, Turcicae, Arabicae, Persicae, praecipuas earum opes à Turcis peculiariter usurpatas continens, nimirum Lexicon Turkico-Arabico-Persicum[1], Vienna, column 1650
- Meninski, Franciszek à Mesgnien (1680) “چمشیر”, in Thesaurus linguarum orientalium, Turcicae, Arabicae, Persicae, praecipuas earum opes à Turcis peculiariter usurpatas continens, nimirum Lexicon Turkico-Arabico-Persicum[2], Vienna, column 2860
- Поленаковиќ, Харалампие (2007) “1436. ŠIMŠÍR”, in Зузана Тополињска, Петар Атанасов, editors, Турските елементи во ароманскиот[3], put into Macedonian from the author’s Serbo-Croatian Turski elementi u aromunskom dijalektu (1939, unpublished) by Веселинка Лаброска, Скопје: Македонска академија на науките и уметностите, →ISBN, page 179
- Pomorska, Marzanna (2013) Materials for a Historical Dictionary of New Persian Loanwords in Old Anatolian and Ottoman Turkish from the 13th to the 16th Century (Studia Turcologica Cracoviensia; 13)[4], Kraków: Jagiellonian University Press, →ISBN, page 241