сайын
Kazakh
Etymology
From Proto-Turkic *sāyïn.
Adjective
сайын • (saiyn)
Derived terms
- күн сайын (kün saiyn, “every day”)
Kumyk
Etymology
From Proto-Turkic *sāyïn (“every; each time...”), derived from Proto-Turkic *sā(y)- (“to count”).
Cognate with Old Uyghur [script needed] (sajïn, “every, each”); Tatar саен (sayen), Kazakh сайын (saiyn), Bashkir һайын (hayın), Uzbek sayin (“every; the more, etc.”).
Determiner
сайын • (sayın)
Kyrgyz
Etymology
From Proto-Turkic *sāyïn (“every; each time...”), derived from Proto-Turkic *sā(y)- (“to count”).
Cognate with Old Uyghur [script needed] (sajïn, “every, each”); Tatar саен (sayen), Kazakh сайын (saiyn), Bashkir һайын (hayın), Uzbek sayin (“every; the more”), and Chuvash -сем (-sem, “-s, plural suffix”).
Adverb
сайын • (sayın) (Arabic spelling سايىن)
Southern Altai
Etymology
From Proto-Turkic *sāyïn (“every; each time...”), derived from Proto-Turkic *sā(y)- (“to count”).
Cognate with Old Uyghur [script needed] (sajïn, “every, each”); Tatar саен (sayen), Kazakh сайын (saiyn), Bashkir һайын (hayın), Uzbek sayin (“every; the more, etc.”).
Adverb
сайын • (sayïn)
References
Čumakajev A. E., editor (2018), “сайын”, in Altajsko-russkij slovarʹ [Altaic–Russian Dictionary], Gorno-Altaysk: NII altaistiki im. S.S. Surazakova, →ISBN
Yakut
Etymology
From earlier *čayïn < *ǰayïn, from Proto-Turkic *yāy-ïn (“during summer”), from *yāy (“summer, spring”) and *-in (instrumental case).
Cognate with Old Turkic [script needed] (yayïn, “in the summer”), Dolgan һайын (“in the summer”), Bashkir йәйен (yəyen, “in the summer”), Kyrgyz жайын (jayın, “during summer”), Tuvan чайын (çayın).
The verbal sense may be due to the common notion of the "seasons of one's life".
Noun
сайын • (sayın)
Verb
сайын • (sayın)
- (intransitive) (literal or figurative) to develop
See also
| Seasons in Yakut · дьыл кэмнэрэ (jıl kemnere) (layout · text) · category | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| саас (saas, “spring”) сааһын (saahın, “spring”) |
сай (say, “summer”) сайын (sayın, “summer”) |
күс (küs, “autumn, fall”) күһүн (kühün, “autumn, fall”) |
кыс (kıs, “winter”) кыһын (kıhın, “winter”) |