خرمن
Khalaj
[edit]Noun
[edit]خَرمَن (xarman or xərmən) (definite accusative خَرمَنی or خَرمَنؽ, plural خَرمَنلَر or خَرمَنلار)
Declension
[edit]Ottoman Turkish
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]- خرمان (harman)
Etymology
[edit]From Persian خرمن (xerman, xarman).
Noun
[edit]خرمن • (hirmen, harmen, hermen)
Descendants
[edit]- Turkish: harman (with dialectal variants)
- → Armenian: հառման (haṙman), խարման (xarman)
- → Bulgarian: харма́н (harmán)
- → Macedonian: харман (harman)
- → Romanian: harman
- → Serbo-Croatian:
Further reading
[edit]- Kélékian, Diran (1911) “خرمن”, in Dictionnaire turc-français[1], Constantinople: Mihran, page 537
- Meninski, Franciszek à Mesgnien (1680) “خرمن”, in Thesaurus linguarum orientalium, Turcicae, Arabicae, Persicae, praecipuas earum opes à Turcis peculiariter usurpatas continens, nimirum Lexicon Turkico-Arabico-Persicum[2], Vienna, column 1886
- Zenker, Julius Theodor (1876) “خرمن”, in Türkisch-arabisch-persisches Handwörterbuch, volume 2 (overall work in German and French), Leipzig: Wilhelm Engelmann, page 406c
Persian
[edit]Etymology
[edit]The sense of a threshing floor is only a metonymy or clipping of خرمنگاه (xermangâh, literally “crop or sheave seat”) (badly: خرمانکاه (xermânkâh, “harvest-hay”)). The origin of the whole word is unknown.
If harvest breaks down to what is fitted into a long bag, somewhat of a غِرَارَة (ḡirāra), it may be the جِرَاب (jirāb, “pouch”) wanderwort, which surfaces suffixed in Arabic جِرْبَان (jirbān, “scabbard; belt; collar”) and in dubious candidates like Old Armenian գրապան (grapan, “hem; ephod; pocket”), as well derived from the seemingly perfectly unrelated Iranian uncles of گریبان (geribân, garibân, “collar”), or obscurely borrowed Russian карма́н (karmán, “pocket”).
Noun
[edit]خرمن • (xarman, xerman)
Descendants
[edit]- → Azerbaijani: xırman
- → Chuvash: арман (arman)
- → Kazakh: қырман (qyrman)
- → Khalaj: xarman
- → Khorasani Turkish: xarman
- → Kyrgyz: кырман (kırman)
- → Laz: ხარმანი (xarmani)
- → Turkmen: harman
- → Ottoman Turkish: خرمن (hirmen, harmen, hermen), خرمان (harman)
- → Uzbek: хирмон (xirmon)
- → Russian: хирма́н (xirmán)
Further reading
[edit]- Dehkhoda, Ali-Akbar (1931–) “خرمن”, in Dehkhoda Dictionary Institute, editors, Dehkhoda Dictionary (in Persian), Tehran: University of Tehran Press
- Fleischer, Heinrich (1867) “Nachträgliches”, in Chaldäisches Wörterbuch über die Targumim und einen großen Theil des rabbinischen Schriftthums[3] (in German), Leipzig: Verlag von Baumgärtners Buchhandlung, page 417b
- Steingass, Francis Joseph (1892) “خرمن”, in A Comprehensive Persian–English dictionary, London: Routledge & K. Paul
- Vullers, Johann August (1855) “خرمن”, in Lexicon Persico-Latinum etymologicum cum linguis maxime cognatis Sanscrita et Zendica et Pehlevica comparatum, e lexicis persice scriptis Borhâni Qâtiu, Haft Qulzum et Bahâri agam et persico-turcico Farhangi-Shuûrî confectum, adhibitis etiam Castelli, Meninski, Richardson et aliorum operibus et auctoritate scriptorum Persicorum adauctum[4] (in Latin), volume I, Gießen: J. Ricker, pages 681–682