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)
- In Bashkir cuisine, deep-fried pieces of unleavened dough, served with tea
Declension
| singular only | |
|---|---|
| absolute | бауырһаҡ (bawırhaq) |
| definite genitive | бауырһаҡтың (bawırhaqtıñ) |
| dative | бауырһаҡҡа (bawırhaqqa) |
| definite accusative | бауырһаҡты (bawırhaqtı) |
| locative | бауырһаҡта (bawırhaqta) |
| ablative | бауырһаҡтан (bawırhaqtan) |
Synonyms
- йыуаса (yıwasa)
See also
- сәк-сәк (sək-sək)