dürüm

See also: durum and Dürüm

English

Etymology

From Turkish dürüm.

Noun

dürüm (plural dürüms)

  1. A traditional Turkish wrap (which is made from lavash or yufka flatbread) that is filled with typical doner kebab ingredients.
    • 2015, Andreas Pritzker, translated by Alex Gabriel, Lies, Lies and More Lies, Norderstedt: BoD – Books on Demand, →ISBN, page 177:
      Lara says she’s going to get something to eat from the Turkish place on the corner; she asks if she should bring me anything. I ask for a dürüm with everything, except onions.
    • 2021, Ahmet Halûk Ünal, translated by Nicholas Glastonbury, “Soramin’s Diary”, in The American Way: Stories of Invasion, Manchester: Comma Press, “Kurdistan, 1999” section:
      They grabbed the tray with a dürüm and ayran from my bedside table and put it on my lap.
    • 2024, Mathias Weber, Europe’s Sweet Spot for Software Architects, [Vienna]: story.one publishing, →ISBN, page 52:
      If you can't follow a PHP guru's talk, two dürüms might help clear your head and restore your sanity.

Translations

Further reading

Turkish

Etymology

From dür- (to roll up, to fold up) +‎ -üm (noun forming suffix).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [dyɾym]

Noun

dürüm

  1. dürüm (a traditional Turkish wrap (which is made from lavash or yufka flatbread) that is filled with typical doner kebab ingredients)
  2. cylindrical object.

Declension

Declension of dürüm
singular plural
nominative dürüm dürümler
definite accusative dürümü dürümleri
dative dürüme dürümlere
locative dürümde dürümlerde
ablative dürümden dürümlerden
genitive dürümün dürümlerin