چشمه

See also: چشمہ

Ottoman Turkish

Etymology

Borrowed from Classical Persian چَشْمَه (čašma, spring, source).

Noun

چَشمه • (çeşme)

  1. fountain, an ornamental water feature usually situated in a garden or public place
  2. spring, source, fount, a spray or body of water springing from the ground
    Synonyms: بوڭار (buñar), عین (ʿayn), قایناق (kaynak), منبع (menbaʿ)

Derived terms

  • قرق چشمه (kırk çeşme, name of a quarter in Instanbul)
  • قورو چشمه (kuru çeşme, name of a village on the Bosphorus)
  • چشمه زار (çeşme zar, district abounding with springs)
  • چشمه سار (çeşme sar, district abounding with springs)
  • چشمه لوله‌سی (çeşme lülesi, spout of a fountain)
  • چوقور چشمه (çukur çeşme, name of a quarter in Instanbul)

Descendants

  • Turkish: çeşme
  • Bulgarian: чешма (češma)
  • Tunisian Arabic: شيشمة (šīšma)
  • Libyan Arabic: شيشمة (šīšma)
  • Macedonian: чешма (češma)
  • Romanian: cișmea

Proper noun

چَشمه • (çeşme)

  1. Çeşme (a town and district of İzmir Province, Turkey)

Descendants

Further reading

Persian

Etymology

    From Middle Persian [script needed] (čšmk' /⁠čašmag⁠/, spring, source), from [script needed] (čšm /⁠čašm⁠/, eye) + [script needed] (-k' /⁠-ag⁠/),[1] equivalent to modern چشم (čašm, eye) +‎ ـه (-e).

    A relation between eye and spring seems to be common in the area. Compare Baluchi چمگ (cammag, spring, source) from چم (camm, eye), Gilaki چمار (čumâr, spring) from چم (čum, eye), Arabic عَيْن (ʕayn, spring, eye), and Old Armenian ակն (akn, eye, spring).

    Pronunciation

     
    • (Iran, formal) IPA(key): [t͡ʃʰeʃ.mé], [ t͡ʃʰæʃ.mé]

    Readings
    Classical reading? čašma
    Dari reading? čašma
    Iranian reading? češma, čašme
    Tajik reading? čašma
    • Audio (Iran):(file)

    Noun

    Dari چَشمَه
    Iranian Persian چِشمِه
    Tajik чашма

    چِشمِه • (češme) (plural چِشمِه‌ها (češme-hâ))

    1. spring (water source)
    2. source

    Derived terms

    Descendants

    References

    1. ^ MacKenzie, D. N. (1971) “čšmk'”, in A concise Pahlavi dictionary, London, New York, Toronto: Oxford University Press, page 21