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koyun

(Îngilîzî)

koymak

  1. (ditransitive) to put
  2. (ditransitive) to put, to add
  3. (ditransitive) to prepare or serve a food or a drink
  4. (ditransitive) to appoint, to assign
  5. (transitive) to to let (someone) go
  6. (transitive) to affect, to touch
  7. (transitive) to leave, to abandon
  8. (slang, transitive, with-dative) to fuck
  9. (slang, transitive, with-dative) to hit
  10. (slang, transitive, with-dative) to beat

koy

Pircarînî

B2
Wekî (IPA) tê bilêvkirin
/koˈjun/
Etîmolojî (Îngilîzî)

In summary

From Ottoman Turkish قویون (koyun), from Proto-Turkic *kōń. Cognate with Azerbaijani qoyun, Old Turkic 𐰸𐰆𐰪 (koñ), Turkmen goýun, Kazakh қой (qoi), Uzbek qo'y. Related to written Mongolian ᠬᠣᠨᠢᠨ (qonin, “sheep”), Mongolian хонь (xonʹ, “sheep”), Buryat хонин (xonin, “sheep”) and Kalmyk хөн (xön, “sheep”), but the nature of relationship is unclear; the Mongolic terms may be borrowed from Turkic. Pedersen derived all of these forms from Old Armenian խոյ (xoy), but in Doerfer's opinion this is phonetically impossible. Ačaṙyan too regards the resemblance to Old Armenian խոյ (xoy) as accidental.

mih

beyindir

berindir

paşil

hevirandin

pizî

بهران

مهڕ

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