сапог

Bulgarian

Etymology

Inherited from Old Church Slavonic сапогъ (sapogŭ), with further origin unclear.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [sɐˈpɔk]

Noun

сапо́г • (sapógm

  1. (historical) old-style boot or rugged shoe

Declension

Declension of сапо́г
singular plural
indefinite сапо́г
sapóg
сапо́зи
sapózi
definite
(subject form)
сапо́гът
sapógǎt
сапо́зите
sapózite
definite
(object form)
сапо́га
sapóga
count form сапо́га
sapóga

Coordinate terms

References

Russian

Alternative forms

Etymology

Inherited from Old East Slavic сапогъ (sapogŭ). Obscure etymology:

  • Per Vasmer, from сопе́ть (sopétʹ) +‎ -ог (-og), compare сопе́ль (sopélʹ) 'wind instrument', 'pipe'. The modern Russian сапо́г means shoes with a high top, what explains the similarity with the pipe. This etymology encounters phonetic difficulties if we take into account сопе́ть (sopet') as a source, because Old East Slavic or Old Church Slavonic don't have the form *сопогъ.
  • Per Menges, Vahros and Trubachyov, from Turkic languages, compare Proto-Turkic *sараɣ-, *sарuɣ- 'shafted shoes', modern Turkic sap 'stem'. This etymology has the same phonetic problems as Vasmer's etymology. In this case, it should be *сопагъ (compare това́р (továr) from Turkic tavar or колпа́к (kolpák) from Turkic kalpak) or *сопугъ.[1] Semantic difficulties also arise, in Old Church Slavonic it means 'sandals', 'shoes with tops no higher than the ankles', Turkic source originally suggests high-top shoes.[2]
  • Per Lvov, from *sapati 'to tie, to bind'. According to Lvov and Semyonov, the original meaning is 'puttee, shoes, sandals',[3][4] compare dialectal сап (sap) 'fetters', colloquial заса́пить (zasápitʹ) 'tie in a knot'. In this case сапо́г from сап (sap) +‎ -ог (-og).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [sɐˈpok]
  • Audio:(file)

Noun

сапо́г • (sapógm inan (genitive сапога́, nominative plural сапоги́, genitive plural сапо́г, relational adjective сапо́жный)

  1. boot
    боло́тные сапоги́bolótnyje sapogíwaders (high waterproof boots)

Declension

Descendants

  • Armenian: սապոգ (sapog)
  • Korean: 사바귀 (sabagwi)
  • Kildin Sami: са̄һпе (sāhpje)
  • Kurdish:
    Northern Kurdish: sapok, sapong
  • Russenorsk: sabagof
  • Yup'ik: cap'akiq

See also

References

Further reading

  • Vasmer, Max (1964–1973) “сапог”, in Oleg Trubachyov, transl., Этимологический словарь русского языка [Etymological Dictionary of the Russian Language] (in Russian), Moscow: Progress