hangi

See also: Hàn-gí

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Maori hāngī.

Noun

hangi (countable and uncountable, plural hangis or hangi)

  1. (New Zealand) A traditional Māori method of cooking food using heated rocks buried in a pit oven.
  2. (New Zealand, uncountable) Food cooked in this way.
    • 2015, Anne Ashby, Worlds Collide:
      He glanced at the formal setting in front of him, wishing he could be at a marae eating hangi right now.

Translations

Anagrams

Turkish

Etymology

From Ottoman Turkish هانكی (hangi), خانغی (hangı, which), from earlier قنغی (kangı), from Old Anatolian Turkish [script needed] (qanqï, which), from Proto-Turkic *kan-, *kań-, a derivation from the interrogative stem *ka-. Ultimately cognate to Turkish hani (where), Old Uyghur [script needed] (kanu, what, which), Karakhanid [script needed] (kayū, what, which), Bashkir ҡайһы (qayhı, which), Kyrgyz кай (kay, what, which), but its relation to the original word is obscure.[1]

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /haɲ.ɟi/

Pronoun

hangi

  1. (interrogative) which
    Hangi ayda doğdun?Which month were you born in?

Usage notes

  • Note: Declension of the singular form requires hangi-si, which literally translates to “which one, which of”.

Declension

Derived terms

References

  1. Clauson, Gerard (1972), “ka:ñu:”, in An Etymological Dictionary of pre-thirteenth-century Turkish, Oxford: Clarendon Press, page 632
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