сак
See also: саʼӄ and Appendix:Variations of "sak"
Chuvash
Alternative forms
- сакӑ (sak̬ă), саккӑ (sakkă)
Etymology
From Proto-Turkic *sekü (“stone bench, stage, dais”).
Noun
сак • (sak)
Further reading
Moksha
Verb
сак • (sak)
- second-person singular imperative of самс (sams)
Russian
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [sak]
Etymology 1
Noun
сак • (sak) m inan (genitive са́ка, nominative plural са́ки, genitive plural са́ков)
Declension
Derived terms
- сачо́к (sačók)
Etymology 2
Noun
сак • (sak) m inan (genitive са́ка, nominative plural са́ки, genitive plural са́ков)
Declension
Etymology 3
Borrowed from Old Persian [script needed] (Sakā).
Noun
сак • (sak) m anim (genitive са́ка, nominative plural са́ки, genitive plural са́ков)
- (historical) Saka (member a group of nomadic Iranian peoples who historically inhabited the northern and eastern Eurasian Steppe and the Tarim Basin, related to the Scythians)
Declension
Southern Altai
Etymology
From Proto-Turkic *sak. Cognate to Kyrgyz сак (sak), Kazakh сақ (saq), Tatar сак (saq), etc.
Adjective
сак • (sak)
References
- Verbickij, V. I. (1884) “сак”, in Словарь алтайского и аладагского наречий тюркского языка [Dictionary of Altaic and Aladag dialects of Turkic], Kazan, page 287
- Studia Turcologica cracoviensia 7, 147 pages.
Tatar
Adjective
сак • (saq) (Latin spelling saq)