бал

See also: бял

Bashkir

Бал [1].
Бал [2].

Etymology

From Proto-Turkic *bal (honey).

Cognate with Shor пал (honey), Turkish bal (honey), Chuvash пыл (pyl, honey).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [bɑɫ]
  • (file)
  • Hyphenation: бал (one syllable)

Noun

бал (bal)

  1. honey
    Сәскә балы.
    Säskä balı.
    Flower honey.
    Йүкә балы тәмле, хуш еҫле, ҙур дауалау көсөнә эйә.
    Yükä balı tämle, xuş yeθle, ður dawalaw kösönä eyä.
    Linden honey is palatable, has a pleasant smell (and) great medicinal properties.
    Башҡорт балына һорау йылдан-йыл арта бара.
    Başqort balına horaw yıldan-yıl arta bara.
    The demand for Bashkir honey has been growing year after year.
  2. mead; alcoholic drink fermented from honey and water

Declension

Derived terms

Bulgarian

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [baɫ]

Etymology 1

Borrowed from French bal or German Ball; ultimately from Ancient Greek βαλλίζω (ballízō, to dance).

Noun

бал (bal) m (related adjective ба́лен)

  1. (dance) ball
    абсолве́нтски балabsolvéntski balgraduation ball
Declension

Etymology 2

Borrowed from Russian балл (ball), from French balle (voting ball).

Noun

бал (bal) m

  1. (singularonly) score/mark(s)/grade(s) (on an exam)
  2. (nautical, seismology) point (on an intensity scale, e.g. the Beaufort scale or Richter scale)
Declension

Kalmyk

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /bal/, /baˈlə/

Noun

бал (bal) (Clear script spelling ᡋᠠᠯ (bal))

  1. honey

Kazakh

Cyrillic бал (bal)
Arabic بال
Latin

Etymology 1

From Proto-Turkic *bal (honey).

Noun

бал (bal)

  1. honey
    бал қайнату
    bal qainatu
    to boil honey

Etymology 2

Borrowed from Persian فال (fâl), from Arabic فَأْل (faʔl, omen).

Noun

бал (bal)

  1. divination, fortune-telling
    бал ашу
    bal aşu
    fortune-telling

Etymology 3

Borrowed from Russian бал (bal), from French bal, from Late Latin ballō.

Noun

бал (bal)

  1. ball, dance
Declension

Kyrgyz

Бал [1].
Бал [2].

Etymology

From Proto-Turkic *bạl. Cognate with Azerbaijani bal, Bashkir бал (bal), Kazakh бал (bal), Tatar бал (bal), Turkish bal, Turkmen bal, Uzbek bol, etc.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /bal/
  • Hyphenation: бал

Noun

бал (bal)

  1. honey

Declension

Mongolian

Etymology

From Proto-Mongolic *bal, from Proto-Turkic *bal. Compare Dongxiang ban, Turkish bal.

Noun

бал (bal) (Mongolian spelling ᠪᠠᠯ (bal))

  1. honey

Ossetian

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Georgian ბალი (bali).

Noun

бал (bal)

  1. (Iron) cherry

References

  • Бигулаев, Б. Б.; Гагкаев, К. Е.; Кулаев, Н. X.; Туаева, О. Н. (1970), бал”, in Касаев А. М., editor, Осетинско-русский словарь [Ossetian–Russian Dictionary], 3rd edition, Ordzhonikidze: Publishing House “Ir”
  • Абаев, В. И. (1958–1995), “bal”, in Историко-этимологический словарь осетинского языка [Historical-Etymological Dictionary of the Ossetian Language] (in Russian), Moscow, Leningrad: Academy Press

Russian

Etymology

First attested in 1705. Borrowed from French bal.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [baɫ]
  • (file)
  • Rhymes: -al

Noun

бал (bal) m inan (genitive ба́ла, nominative plural балы́, genitive plural бало́в, related adjective ба́льный)

  1. ball, dance

Declension

Descendants

  • Armenian: բալ (bal)
  • Azerbaijani: bal
  • Georgian: ბალი (bali)
  • Kazakh: бал (bal)
  • Yakut: баал (baal)

Southern Altai

Etymology

From Proto-Turkic *bal (honey). Cognate with Kazakh бал (bal), Kyrgyz бал (bal), Crimean Tatar bal, Kumyk бал (bal), Azerbaijani bal, Turkish bal, Shor пал, etc.

Noun

бал (bal)

  1. honey
    Synonym: мӧт (möt)

References

Čumakajev A. E., editor (2018), бал”, in Altajsko-russkij slovarʹ [Altaic–Russian Dictionary], Gorno-Altaysk: NII altaistiki im. S.S. Surazakova, →ISBN

Tatar

Noun

бал (bal)

  1. honey

Udi

Etymology

From Aghwan 𐔱𐔰𐔰𐔾 (baal, doer).

Noun

бал (bal)

  1. doer, maker

Further reading

  • Gukasjan, Vorošil (1974), бал”, in Удинско-азербайджанско-русский словарь [Udi–Azerbaijani–Russian Dictionary], Baku: Academy Press, page 69
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.