diz

(Engels)

dizmek

  1. (transitive) to line up
  2. (transitive) to string, to thread
  3. (transitive) to prepare, to compose (an artwork)
  4. (transitive) to organize, to arrange
  5. (transitive) to put letters together in a printing press

Frequentie

B2
Etymologie (Engels)

In summary

Inherited from Ottoman Turkish دیز (diz, “knee”), from Old Anatolian Turkish [script needed] (diz, “knee”), from Proto-Turkic *tīŕ, *tǖŕ (“knee”). Compare Hungarian térd (“knee”), a Turkic borrowing. See also dirsek (“elbow”), a derivation from the same root. Cognates Cognate with Old Turkic 𐱅𐰃𐰕 (tiz, “knee”), Karakhanid [script needed] (tīz, “knee”), Southern Altai тизе (tize, “knee”), Azerbaijani diz (“knee”), Chuvash чӗр (čĕr, “knee”), Kazakh тізе (tıze, “knee”), Khakas тізек (tìzek, “knee”), Kyrgyz тизе (tize, “knee”), Tatar тез (tez, “knee”), Turkmen dy:z (“knee”), Tuvan дискек (diskek, “knee”), Uyghur تىز (tiz, “knee”), Uzbek tiz (“knee”), Yakut түһэх (tüheq, “knee”).

kni

tnin

Sign in to write sticky notes