тхьэмадэ
Kabardian
Etymology
From Common Circassian *tħamada. Cognate with Adyghe тхьаматэ (tḥaamaate). An adaptation of a foreign word, probably Ottoman Turkish داماد (damat, “bridegroom; son-in-law; sovereign's brother-in-law”), from Persian داماد (dâmâd, “bridegroom; son-in-law; father-in-law; sovereign's brother-in-law; wooer, lover”), the ending reshaped under the influence of Kabardian адэ (aade, “father”). Sometimes explained as тхьэ (tḥe, “god”) + адэ (aade, “father”), but that is a folk etymology.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [tħamaːda]
Noun
тхьэмадэ • (tḥemaade)
- foreman (of a village)
- boss
- master (superior person in status or rank)
- chairman
- father-in-law
- (dialectal) wooer, bridegroom
- (dated, possibly archaic) religious leader
- (possibly dated) husband
Declension
declension of тхьэмадэ
case | singular | plural |
---|---|---|
indefinite | тхьэмадэ (tḥemaade) | тхьэмадэхэ (tḥemaadexe) |
nominative | тхьэмадэр (tḥemaader) | тхьэмадэхэр (tḥemaadexer) |
ergative | тхьэмадэм (tḥemaadem) | тхьэмадэхэмэ (tḥemaadexeme) |
instrumental | тхьэмадэ(м)кӏэ (tḥemaade(m)kʼe) | тхьэмадэхэ(м)кӏэ (tḥemaadexe(m)kʼe) |
invertive | тхьэмадэу (tḥemaadewu) | тхьэмадэхыу (tḥemaadexəwu) |
Descendants
(Taking Kabardian as representative of Common Circassian)
Further reading
- Abaev, V. I. (1975), “Contribution à l'histoire des mots”, in Mélanges linguistiques offerts à Emile Benveniste (in French), Louvain: Peeters, pages 8–10
- Абаев, В. И. (1979) Историко-этимологический словарь осетинского языка [Historical-Etymological Dictionary of the Ossetian Language] (in Russian), volume III, Moscow, Leningrad: Academy Press, page 227
- Chirikba, Viacheslav A. (1996) A Dictionary of Common Abkhaz, Leiden, page 32
- Карданов Б. М., editor (1957), “тхьэмадэ”, in Кабардинско-русский словарь [Kabardian–Russian Dictionary], Moscow: Gosudarstvennoje izdatelʹstvo inostrannyx i nacionalʹnyx slovarej, page 349b
- Шагиров, А. К. (1977), К. В. Ломтатидзе, editor, Этимологический словарь адыгских (черкесских) языков [Etymological Dictionary of Adyghean (Circassian) Languages] (in Russian), volume II, Moscow: Nauka, pages 82–83
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