халтура

See also: халтуря

Russian

FWOTD – 5 November 2021

Etymology

From Medieval Latin chartularius, relating to a chartulary (хартула́рий (xartulárij) privy to the imparting of additional earnings. Cognate to Ukrainian хавту́ра (xavtúra), хавту́р (xavtúr, gift to clerics in kind; gift; graft, palm-oil), Belarusian хаўту́ры (xaŭtúry, funeral).

Pronunciation

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

Noun

халту́ра • (xaltúraf inan (genitive халту́ры, nominative plural халту́ры, genitive plural халту́р, diminutive халту́рка)

  1. (regional, now largely unknown) funeral banquet, extra-treats in connection to someone being interred
    Synonym: поми́нки (pomínki)
  2. (informal, slang) yields acquired or work performed irregularly, job of imperfect compliance
    1. undeclared work, black market job, supplementary contract, moonlighting, participation in informal economy, nixer; khaltura
    2. shoddy work (something intentionally done poorly), sloppy or half-assed job; hack; a botch; a pot boiler; khaltura

Declension

  • халту́рный (xaltúrnyj)
  • халту́рщик m (xaltúrščik)
  • халту́рить impf (xaltúritʹ), схалту́рить pf (sxaltúritʹ), подхалту́рить pf (podxaltúritʹ)

Descendants

  • Armenian: խալտուրա (xaltura)
  • Azerbaijani: xaltura
  • Belarusian: халту́ра (xaltúra)
  • English: khaltura
  • Estonian: haltuura
  • Georgian: ხალტურა (xalṭura)
  • Hebrew: חַלְטוּרָה (khaltúra)
  • Kazakh: халтура (xaltura)
  • Kyrgyz: халтура (haltura)
  • Polish: chałtura
  • Ukrainian: халту́ра (xaltúra)
  • Uzbek: xaltura

References

  • Tatár, Maria Magdolna (1999) “A Turkic loan-word in modern Russian political publicism and Turkic and Mongolic preverbs”, in Studia Orientalia[2], volume 85, Helsinki, pages 215–220
  • Vasmer, Max (1964–1973) “халтура”, in Oleg Trubachyov, transl., Этимологический словарь русского языка [Etymological Dictionary of the Russian Language] (in Russian), Moscow: Progress