གཡག
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Tibetan[edit]
Etymology[edit]
From Proto-Sino-Tibetan *g-jak ~ g-jaŋ (“sheep, yak”).
Pronunciation[edit]
- Old Tibetan: /*ɡjak/
- Lhasa: /ja˥˨/
- Old Tibetan:
- Ü-Tsang
- Tibetan pinyin: yah
- (Lhasa) IPA(key): /ja˥˨/
Noun[edit]
གཡག • (g.yag)
- yak (domestic)
Coordinate terms[edit]
- འབྲི ('bri, “female yak”)
Descendants[edit]
- → Armenian: յակ (yak)
- → Catalan: iac
- → Czech: jak
- → Danish: yak
- → Dutch: jak
- → English: yak
- → Faroese: jakkoksi
- → Finnish: jakki
- → French: yack, yak
- → Georgian: იაკი (iaḳi)
- → German: Yak, Jak
- → Hebrew: יאק (yak)
- → Hungarian: jak
- → Icelandic: jakuxi
- → Ido: yako
- → Interlingua: yak
- → Italian: yak m
- → Japanese: ヤク (yaku)
- → Macedonian: јак (jak)
- → Marathi: याक (yāk)
- → Norwegian Bokmål: jak
- → Polish: jak m
- → Portuguese: iaque
- → Romanian: iac m
- → Russian: як (jak)
- → Slovak: jak
- → Slovene: jak
- → Spanish: yac, yak
- → Swedish: jak
- → Turkish: yak
See also[edit]
- འབྲོང ('brong, “yak (wild)”)