ايلا

See also: ایلا

Early Old Oghuz

Etymology 1

Likely inherited from Proto-Common Turkic *anlayu through crasis and metathesis.[1] The alternative theory, being that it's a crasis of *an-ile,[2] is impossible due to historical phonetics, see بِلا (bilē), بِرْلا (birlē, with).

Adverb

اَيْلا (eylē)

  1. like that
    اَيْلا قِلْغِلْ
    Ayla kılğıl.
    Do it like that.
Derived terms
  • Early Old Oghuz: اَیْلُق‌ْاَیْلُقْ (ayluq-ayluq)
Descendants

Etymology 2

Oghuz form of اُذْلَكْ (öðleg) ultimately inherited from Proto-Common Turkic *ödleg.

Noun

اُيْلا (öylē)

  1. noon
    • [1072–4, مَحْمُود الكَاشْغَرِيّ [maḥmūd al-kāšḡariyy], دِيوَانِ لُغَاتِ ٱلتُرْك [dīwāni luḡāti t-turk], volume 1 (in Arabic), عامره, published 1917, page 103:
      اُيْلا — اَلْظُهْرُ. بِالْغُزِّيَّةِ. وَقِفْجاقْ تَجْعَلُ الْياءَ زاياً فَتَقُولُ «اُزْلا».
      ʔuylā — ʔalẓuhru. bi-l-ḡuzziyyati. wa-qifjāq tajʕalu l-yāʔa zāyan fa-taqūlu “ʔuzlā”.
      Öyle — the noon. Among the Oghuz. The Kipchak make the yah into zayn and say özle.]
Descendants

References

  1. ^ Clauson, Gerard (1972) “ayla:”, in An Etymological Dictionary of pre-thirteenth-century Turkish, Oxford: Clarendon Press, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 272
  2. ^ Nişanyan, Sevan (2002–) “öyle”, in Nişanyan Sözlük
  • Clauson, Gerard (1972) “öḏleg”, in An Etymological Dictionary of pre-thirteenth-century Turkish, Oxford: Clarendon Press, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 272

Further reading

Old Anatolian Turkish

Etymology 1

Inherited from Proto-Turkic *anlayu.

Adverb

اَيْلا • (eyle)

  1. like that, as such.
    اَيْلا قِلْغِلْ
    eyle ḳılġıl
    do as such
Descendants

Etymology 2

Inherited from Proto-Turkic *ödleg.

Noun

اُيْلا • (öyle)

  1. noon
Descendants