فراجه

Ottoman Turkish

Etymology

From Byzantine Greek φορεσιά (phoresiá) – still Greek φορεσιά (foresiá), φόρεμα (fórema) –, from φέρω (phérō, to bear).

Noun

فراجه (ferece, ferace)

  1. a kind of robe, floating and with long sleeves, ferace

Descendants

  • Turkish: ferace
  • Egyptian Arabic: فَرَجِيَّة (farajiyya)
  • Armenian: փարաջա (pʿaraǰa), փարաջի (pʿaraǰi), փառաջա (pʿaṙaǰa), փա̈րա̈ջա̈ (pʿäräǰä), փըրըջա̈ (pʿərəǰä), փըրըջը (pʿərəǰə), ֆէրէճէ (fērēčē), ֆէրաճէ (fēračē), ֆարաջե (faraǰe), ֆա̈րա̈ջա̈ (färäǰä), ֆարաջի (faraǰi), ֆըրըջը (fərəǰə), ֆառաջա (faṙaǰa) (in some dialects possibly via other languages)
  • Bulgarian: фередже́ (feredžé)
  • Greek: φερετζές (feretzés)
  • Kurdish:
    Northern Kurdish: ferencî
    Central Kurdish: فەرەجی (ferecî), فەرەنجی (ferencî)
    Southern Kurdish: فەرەجی (ferecî), فەرەنجی (ferencî)
  • Macedonian: фереџе (feredže)
  • Persian: فرجی (faraji), فرنجی (faranji)
    • Tajik: фаранҷӣ (faranjī)
      • Kyrgyz: беренжи (berenji)
      • Turkmen: perenji
        • Azerbaijani: pərəncə
      • Uzbek: paranji
  • Serbo-Croatian:
    Cyrillic script: фѐреџа
    Latin script: fèredža

References

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.