ایپك

Old Anatolian Turkish

Etymology

Inherited from Proto-Turkic *yïpak. [1]

Noun

اِیپَكْ • (ipäk)

  1. silk

Descendants

  • Azerbaijani: ipək
  • Gagauz: ipek
  • Ottoman Turkish: ایپك (ipek)
    • Turkish: ipek
    • Armenian: իփեկ (ipʻek)

References

  1. ^ Nişanyan, Sevan (2002–) “ipek”, in Nişanyan Sözlük

Ottoman Turkish

Etymology

Inherited from Old Anatolian Turkish اِیپَكْ (ipäk), from Proto-Turkic *yïpak (silk). Cognate with Azerbaijani ipək, Kazakh жібек (jıbek), Kyrgyz жибек (jibek), Salar yipek, Turkmen ýüpek, Uyghur يىپەك (yipek) and Uzbek ipak.

Noun

ایپك • (ipek) (definite accusative ایپكی (ipeği), plural ایپكلر (ipekler))

  1. silk, a fine, protein fiber excreted by the silkworm which can be woven into textiles
    Synonyms: ابرشیم (ibrişim), حریر (harir), قز (kazz)

Derived terms

  • آق ایپك (ak ipek, cooked silk)
  • ایپك بوجكی (ipek böceği, silkworm)
  • ایپك تفه‌سی (ipek tefesi, hank of wound silk)
  • ایپك شرابی (ipek şarabı, wine made from white mulberry)
  • ایپك طولابی (ipek dolabi, silk-winder)
  • ایپك قوردی (ipek kurdu, silkworm)
  • ایپك قوزه‌سی (ipek kozası, silkworm cocoon)
  • ایپك كبی (ipek gibi, like silk, soft)
  • ایپك چیچكی (ipek çiçeği, moss rose)
  • ایپكجی (ipekci, silk-merchant)
  • ایپكلو (ipekli, made of silk)
  • خام ایپك (ham ipek, raw silk)
  • قامچی ایپك (kamçı ipek, silk of ordinary quality)

Descendants

  • Turkish: ipek
  • Armenian: իփեկ (ipʻek)

Further reading