пир
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Proto-Slavic *pirъ.
пир • (pir) m
Ultimately derived from Arabic بَزّ (bazz). Cognate with Old Turkic 𐰋𐰕 (böz), Southern Altai бӧс (bös, “fabric, cloth”), Karakhanid بُوزْ (bȫz), Chagatai بوز (böz), Uyghur بۆز (böz), Turkish bez, Turkmen biz.
The doublet пӳс (püs) (“calico”) has the same origin, but it was borrowed into Chuvash either from Crimean Tatar böz or from Bashkir бөз (böz).
пир • (pir) (uncountable)
Inherited from Proto-Slavic *pirъ.
пир • (pir) m
From Proto-Turkic *bīr (“one”).
1 | 2 > | |
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Cardinal : пир (pir) Ordinal : биринджи, биринчи (birindži, birinči) | ||
пир • (pir)
N. A Baskakov, editor (1972), “пир”, in Severnyje dialekty Altajskovo (Ojrotskovo Jazyka- Dialekt kumandincev(Kumandin Kiži) [Northern Dialect of Altai -Kumandin Dialect(Kumandin kiži)], Moskva: glavnaja redakcija vostočnoja literatury, →ISBN
Inherited from Old East Slavic пиръ (pirŭ), from Proto-Slavic *pirъ.
пир • (pir) m inan (genitive пи́ра, nominative plural пиры́, genitive plural пиро́в)
From Proto-Turkic *bīr (“one”).
1 | 2 > | |
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Cardinal : пир Ordinal : пиринчи | ||
пир • (pir)
From Proto-Samoyedic *pirə, from Proto-Uralic *pide.
пир • (pyir°)
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