Kabaks and Kharbuzes

From FireSpeakerWiki
Revision as of 02:47, 4 December 2004 by Gmfbrown (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigationJump to search

Kabak

  • Turkic
    • Turkish - kabak - squash
    • Uzbek - ????? /q?'w?q/ - pumpkin
    • Tatar - ????? /q?'b?q/ - pumpkin
    • Kazakh - ????? /q?'b?q/ - pumpkin, squash
    • Azeri - balqabak - pumpkin, squash
  • Estonian - kabats^okk - squash
  • Russian - ??????? /k?b?'t??k/ - pumpkin
  • Japanese - /k?bot??/ - pumpkin, squash
  • Yiddish - /k?'b?k/ - squash
  • Yoeme - kama - squash
  • Caucasus
    • Chechen - ghaapaq - pumpkin
    • Ingush - jaabaq - pumpkin
    • Georgian - KVAXI - squash

Kharbuz

  • Turkic
    • Turkish - karpuz - watermelon
    • Uzbek - ?????? /t?r'wuz/ - watermelon
    • Tatar - ?????? /q?r'b?z/ - watermelon
    • Kazakh - ?????? /q?r'b?z/ - watermelon
  • Uralic
    • Estonian - arbuus - melon; korvits - pumpkin
    • Finnish - arbuusi - watermelon; kurpitsa - pumpkin, squash
  • Russian - ????? /?r'buz/ - watermelon
  • Yiddish - /?r'buz/ - watermelon
  • German - Kürbis - pumpkin, squash
  • Farsi - xarboze - melon
  • Zarma - kabusa - squash
  • Baltic
    • Latvian - arbu¯zs - watermelon
    • Lithuanian - arbu¯zas - watermelon
  • Balkan Sprachbund and Caucasus
    • Greek - ???π???? - watermelon
    • Albanian - karpuz - watermelon
    • Chechen - horbaz - watermelon
  • Iberian
    • Basque - kalabaza - pumpkin, squash
    • Spanish - calabaza - pumpkin; calabazín - squash
  • Indic
    • Urdu - /kh?r'buz/ - ~melon
    • Nepali - /kh?r'buz?/ - melon (all types)

Kavun

  • Turkic
    • Turkish - kavun - melon
    • Uzbek - ????? /q?'wun/ - melon
    • Tatar - ????? /q?'wun/ - melon
    • Azeri - qovun - melon
  • Yiddish - /'k?v?n?/ - watermelon


Note to Jon from George: Every time I make a change to this page, it turns all the non-Roman letters into question marks, and it looks like it moves all the macrons. How does one prevent that from happening. Also, on the Estonian word "korvits" that I added, there's supposed to be an accent on the 'o' that I'm not familiar with. It's shaped like a very squished seven, or like a cedilla, but on the wrong side. If you can figure out what it is and how to get it to show up, that would be nice.


Back to Linguistic Musings