Talk:nervus

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Latest comment: 1 year ago by 77.76.203.219 in topic Singir and the verb -sün
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Singir and the verb -sün[edit]

Look at: Old Turkic: siŋir (OUygh.) Karakhanid: siŋir (MK) Turkish: sinir Tatar: seŋer Middle Turkic: siŋir (AH, Pav. C.) Uzbek: siŋir Turkmen: siŋir Khakassian: sīr Oyrat: siŋir Chuvash: šъnъr Yakut: iŋīr Dolgan: iŋīr Tuva: sīr Kazakh: siŋir, Modern Turkic: sinir. They are very similar to each other. Proto-Altaic: *síŋri Meaning: sinew Russian meaning: жила, сухожилие Turkic: *siŋir

Mongolian: *sinda-su

Tungus-Manchu: *sire-

Korean: *sì'úr

(Acc. to Starostin/Dybo). - - -

There is a verb: Proto-Altaic: *sūnu ( ~ -o) Nostratic: Nostratic

Meaning: to stretch Russian meaning: вытягивать Turkic: *sūn-

Mongolian: *sunu-

Tungus-Manchu: *sūn- Proto-Turkic: *sūn-, Altaic etymology: Altaic etymology

Meaning: to stretch, stretch out Russian meaning: протягивать Old Turkic: sun- (Orkh., OUygh.) Karakhanid: sun- (MK) Turkish: sun- Tatar: son- Middle Turkic: sun- (Pav. C., AH) Uighur: sun- Sary-Yughur: sun-, sɨn- Khakassian: sun- Oyrat: sun- Yakut: ūn- Tuva: sun- Kirghiz: sun- Kazakh: ŭsɨn- Bashkir: hŭn- Karaim: sun- Karakalpak: ŭsɨn-

νεῦρον could be related to Yakut: iŋīr Dolgan: iŋīr.

Uzunbacak Adem UzunbacakAdem 77.76.203.219 10:55, 16 November 2022 (UTC)Reply