бауырһаҡ

Bashkir

Etymology

From *bagïrsak (intestines, visceral organs of animals; deep-fried pieces of unleavened dough). Apparently related to *biagïr (liver).

Presumably, this dish was originally deep-fried in fat melted from sheep visceras, hence the semantic shift.

Cognate with Old Uyghur baγarsuq (intestines, viscera), Turkish bağırsak (intestine); Kazakh бауырсақ (bauyrsaq, pieces of deep-fried dough), Kyrgyz боорсок (boorsok), Southern Altai борсок (borsok, pieces of deep-fried dough), Uzbek boʻgʻirsoq, Tuvan боорзак (boorzak), бовурзак (bovurzak), etc.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [bɑ.wɯ̞rˈhɑq]
  • Hyphenation: ба‧уыр‧һаҡ

Noun

бауырһаҡ • (bawırhaq)

  1. In Bashkir cuisine, deep-fried pieces of unleavened dough, served with tea

Declension

Declension of бауырһаҡ
singular only
absolute бауырһаҡ (bawırhaq)
definite genitive бауырһаҡтың (bawırhaqtıñ)
dative бауырһаҡҡа (bawırhaqqa)
definite accusative бауырһаҡты (bawırhaqtı)
locative бауырһаҡта (bawırhaqta)
ablative бауырһаҡтан (bawırhaqtan)

Synonyms

See also

  • сәк-сәк (sək-sək)