йох

Mariupol Greek

Etymology

Borrowed from Urum йох, ultimately from Proto-Turkic *yōk.

Pronunciation

  • (stressed) IPA(key): [ˈjox]
  • (unstressed) IPA(key): [jʊx]
  • Hyphenation: йох

Particle

йох • (jox)

  1. no
  2. not

Conjunction

йох • (jox)

  1. or

Synonyms

References

  • A. A. Diamantopulo-Rionis with D. L. Demerdzhi, A. M. Davydova-Diamantopulo, A. A. Shapurma, R. S. Kharabadot, and D. K. Patricha (2006) “йох”, in Румейско-русский и русско-румейский словарь пяти диалектов греков Приазовья, Mariupol, →ISBN
  • G. A. Animica, M. P. Galikbarova (2013) Румеку глоса[1], Donetsk, page 71

Northern Khanty

Etymology

Cognates include Eastern Khanty йоӽ (joḥ).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [jɔːx]

Noun

йох (joh) (Kazym)

  1. people

References

  • Elena Skribnik, editor (2016), Ob-Ugric Database: analysed text corpora and dictionaries for less described Ob-Ugric dialects[2], University of Munich
  • Solovar, V. N. (2014) “йох”, in Хантыйско-русский Словарь (казымский диалект) [Khanty-Russian Dictionary (Kazym Dialect)]‎[3], Khanty-Mansiysk: ООО «ФОРМАТ», →ISBN, page 93