бакъ
Avar
Etymology
From Proto-Avaro-Andian *ba(r)q̇:. Akin to Archi бархъ (barq) , Hunzib бохъ (boq) , Udi беъгъ (be̱ɣ) and Khvarshi бухъ (buq).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /baqχː/
Noun
бакъ • (baqxʼ) class 3 (ergative бакъуца, genitive бакъул)
Derived terms
- бакъ-моцӏ (baqxʼ-mocʼ, “heavenly bodies”)
- бакъа-бакъанида (baqxʼa-baqxʼanida, “in the evenings”)
- бакъани-маркӏачӏул (baqxʼani-markʼačʼul, “crepuscular”)
- бакъанигӏуж (baqxʼaniʻuž, “late-afternoon time”)
- бакъанидалъизе (baqxʼanidalˢize, “grow dark”)
- бакъаникак (baqxʼanikak, “afternoon prayer”)
- бакъанимех (baqxʼanimex, “late-afternoon time”)
- бакъбакк (baqxʼbakk, “east”)
- бакъгӏадаб (baqxʼʻadab, “radiant, sunlike”)
- бакъдабжо (baqxʼdabžo, “sun-dried”)
- бакъдебусс (baqxʼdebuss, “sunflower”)
- бакъкквей (baqxʼkkʷej, “solar eclipse”)
- бакълъи (baqxʼlˢi, “sunny side”)
- бакътӏерхь (baqxʼtʼerx̂, “west”)
- бакъулунти (baqxʼulunti, “fever, malaria”)
- бакъхӏазе (baqxʼḥʳaze, “swelter”)
Ingush
Etymology
Akin to Chechen бекъа (beqʼa), Bats ბაყო̆ (baq̇ŏ). This etymology is incomplete. You can help Wiktionary by elaborating on the origins of this term.
Noun
бакъ • (baqʼ) class ?
Derived terms
- бакъилг (baqʼilg)
References
- Nikolaev, Sergei L., Starostin, Sergei A. (1994) “*baq̇e”, in A North Caucasian Etymological Dictionary[1], Moscow: Asterisk Publishers