kurumak
Appearance
Turkish
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Inherited from Ottoman Turkish قورومق (kurumak, “to dry, dry up, (of plants) to die, to become thin”), from Proto-Turkic *kūrï- (“to dry up”).
Cognates
Cognate with Karakhanid [script needed] (kurɨ̄māk, “to become dry”), Old Uyghur [script needed] (kurı-, “to dry”), Azerbaijani qurumaq (“to dry”), Bashkir ҡороу (qorow, “to dry”), Chuvash хӑрма (hărma, “to dry”), Khakas хурирға (xurirğa, “to dry”), Kazakh қурау (qurau, “to dry”), Kyrgyz куруу (kuruu, “to dry”), Southern Altai курар (kurar, “to dry”), Turkmen guramak (“to dry”), Uyghur قۇرۇماق (qurumaq, “to become dry”), Uzbek qurimoq (“to dry”), Yakut куур (kuur, “to dry”).
Pronunciation
[edit]Verb
[edit]kurumak (third-person singular simple present kurur)
- (intransitive) to dry, dry up
- (intransitive, for a plant) to wither, die
- Synonym: solmak
- (intransitive, figuratively, for a person) to get weak, thin
- Synonym: zayıflamak
- (intransitive) to harden due to dryness
- Near-synonym: sertleşmek
- (intransitive) to dry, dry up; to dehydrate, to feel thirsty
- Synonym: susamak
Conjugation
[edit]Derived terms
[edit]Related terms
[edit]Further reading
[edit]- “kurumak”, in Turkish dictionaries, Türk Dil Kurumu
- Ayverdi, İlhan (2010), “kurumak”, in Misalli Büyük Türkçe Sözlük, a reviewed and expanded single-volume edition, Istanbul: Kubbealtı Neşriyatı
- Nişanyan, Sevan (2002–), “kurumak”, in Nişanyan Sözlük