yanmak

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Turkish

Etymology

From Ottoman Turkish یانمق (yanmak, to be burnt, suffer), from (deprecated template usage) [etyl] Proto-Turkic *jan- (to burn (intr.), blaze up).[1]

Cognate with Karakhanid [script needed] (yan-, to burn), (deprecated template usage) [etyl] Azerbaijani, Crimean Tatar yanmaq (to burn), Bashkir яныу (yanıw, to burn), Chuvash ҫунма (śunma, to burn, shine, worry, suffer), Kazakh жану (janu, to burn), Kyrgyz жануу (januu, to burn), Turkmen ýanmak (to be burnt), Uzbek yonmoq (to ignite, glow), Yakut сандаар (sandaar, to shine) (< caus. *jan-tɨr-).

Verb

yanmak (third-person singular simple present yanar)

  1. (intransitive) to burn, be on fire; to burn up, burn down
  2. (intransitive) to be burned, scorched, or singed; to get a burn or scald; to get sunburned
  3. (intransitive, for a place) to be blazing hot, be hot as blazes
  4. (intransitive) to have fever, be feverish
  5. (intransitive) to smart, suffer
  6. (intransitive) to be in a bad predicament, be sunk, be done for, have had it; to get it in the neck; to be in the soup
  7. (intransitive) to expire; to become void
  8. (intransitive, childish) to be out, be eliminated
  9. (intransitive, with dative case) to feel great sadness (at); to feel bitter regret (for)
  10. (intransitive) to be burning (with an emotion, a feeling), to have a burning desire (for).

Conjugation

Derived terms

References

  1. ^ Starostin, Sergei, Dybo, Anna, Mudrak, Oleg (2003) “*jan-”, in Etymological dictionary of the Altaic languages (Handbuch der Orientalistik; VIII.8), Leiden, New York, Köln: E.J. Brill