აკუთა

Georgian

Etymology

Borrowed from Ossetian агуат (agwat).[1]

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /akʼutʰa/
  • Hyphenation: აკუ‧თა

Noun

აკუთა • (aḳuta)

  1. (Middle Georgian) cookstove, hearth (a fireplace made with stones for pots/cauldrons)
  2. (Middle Georgian) small oven

Synonyms

Descendants

  • Middle Armenian: ակութ (akutʻ)
    • Armenian: ակութ (akutʻ)

References

  1. Androniḳašvili, Mzia (1966) Narḳvevebi iranul-kartuli enobrivi urtiertobidan I [Studies in Iranian–Georgian Linguistic Contacts I] (in Georgian), Tbilisi: Tbilisi University Press, pages 76–77

Further reading

  • Orbeliani, Sulxan-Saba (1685–1716) “აკუთა”, in S. Iordanišvili, editor, Siṭq̇vis ḳona kartuli, romel ars leksiḳoni [Collection of Georgian words, that is a dictionary], Tbilisi: Georgian SSR print, published 1949, page 22
  • Čubinov, David (1840) “აკუთა”, in Грузинско-русско-французский словарь [Georgian–Russian–French Dictionary], Saint Petersburg: Academy Press, page 11a, derives from Armenian ակութ (akutʻ)
  • Kluge, Theodor (1913) “Die Indo-Germanischen Lehnwörter im Georgischen”, in Revue de linguistique et de philologie comparée (in German), volume 46, Paris, page 35, derives from Armenian ակութ (akutʻ)
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.