бауырсақ
Kazakh
Etymology
From Proto-Turkic *bagïrsuk (“entrails”), cognate with Old Turkic baɣïrsuq ("intestines, entrails").[1] Related to Kazakh бауыр (bauyr), cognate with Old Turkic baɣïr ("liver")
The word bağırsak ("intestines") was first analyzed by V.V. Radlov as a compound of bağır ("innards, liver") + -sak (diminutive or descriptive affix). A. Zajonchkovsky and K. Brockelmann supported this view, noting that -sak forms other body part names, and Brockelmann proposed a variant bayır-suq.
Alternative explanations, such as W. Bang's suggestion of a verb bayırsa- and G. Clauson’s derivation from bağırsa- ("to want liver"), do not adequately explain the meaning "intestines." G. Doerfer's attempt to unite different forms (bağırsaq, bağarsuq) into an archetype bëgarsôk is considered unnecessary, as earlier analyses suffice. [2]
Phonetic variations like -sak, -suq, and -sıq likely stem from affix blending over time. The Russian baursak (a type of fried dough) is derived from inter-Turkic bavursak.
Related words found in the Old Turkic Dictionary include:
- baɣïrsaq ("kind, softhearted, compassionate")
- baɣïrliɣ ("resilient, courageous")
Cognates include Mongolian боорцог (boorcog), Kyrgyz боорсок (boorsok), Uzbek boʻgʻirsoq, Turkish bağırsak, Bashkir бауырһаҡ (bawırhaq), East Yugur buursagh, Tatar бавырсак (bawırsaq), Tajik бусроқ (busroq), Karakalpak bawırsaq
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /bɑ.wʊr.sɑq/
Noun
бауырсақ • (bauyrsaq)
Declension
| singular | plural | |
|---|---|---|
| nominative | бауырсақ (bauyrsaq) | бауырсақтар (bauyrsaqtar) |
| genitive | бауырсақтың (bauyrsaqtyñ) | бауырсақтардың (bauyrsaqtardyñ) |
| dative | бауырсаққа (bauyrsaqqa) | бауырсақтарға (bauyrsaqtarğa) |
| accusative | бауырсақты (bauyrsaqty) | бауырсақтарды (bauyrsaqtardy) |
| locative | бауырсақта (bauyrsaqta) | бауырсақтарда (bauyrsaqtarda) |
| ablative | бауырсақтан (bauyrsaqtan) | бауырсақтардан (bauyrsaqtardan) |
| instrumental | бауырсақпен (bauyrsaqpen) | бауырсақтармен (bauyrsaqtarmen) |