𐽰𐽰𐽶𐽰

Old Uyghur

Etymology

Inherited from Proto-Turkic *āya (palm). Cognate with Turkish aya.

Noun

𐽰𐽰𐽶𐽰 (ʾʾyʾ /aya/)

  1. (anatomy) palm, inside part of one's hand
    Synonym: 𐽰𐽰𐽸𐽳𐾀 (ʾʾdwt /⁠adut⁠/)
    • c. 10th century, The tale of prince Kalyāṇaṃkara and Pāpaṃkara page 6, lines 7-8 (right page):[1]
      𐽻𐽶𐽺𐽶 𐽰𐽶𐽺𐽽𐽰 𐽻𐽰𐽱𐽰𐽾 𐽹𐽺 𐽰𐽰𐽶𐽰𐽸𐽰𐽲𐽶
      𐽶𐽶𐽺𐽽𐽳 𐽶 𐽹𐽳𐽺𐽽𐽳𐽲 𐾀𐽰𐽷 𐽷𐽳𐽶𐽴𐾂𐽸𐽰𐽷𐽶
      syny ʾyncʾ sʾβʾr mn ʾʾyʾdʾqy
      yyncw y mwncwq tʾk kwyżdʾky
      /Séni inče séver men, ayadaḳï
      yénčü 2 mončuḳ teg közdeki []
      /
      I love you like so,
      like these two pearl beads in [my] palm []

Declension

Declension of 𐽰𐽰𐽶𐽰
singular definite plural
nominative 𐽰𐽰𐽶𐽰 (ʾʾyʾ) 𐽰𐽰𐽶𐽰𐾁𐽰𐽾 (ʾʾyʾlʾr)
genitive 𐽰𐽰𐽶𐽰𐽺𐽶𐽺𐽷 (ʾʾyʾnynk) 𐽰𐽰𐽶𐽰𐾁𐽰𐽾𐽺𐽶𐽺𐽷 (ʾʾyʾlʾrnynk)
dative 𐽰𐽰𐽶𐽰𐽲𐽰 (ʾʾyʾqʾ) 𐽰𐽰𐽶𐽰𐾁𐽰𐽾𐽲𐽰 (ʾʾyʾlʾrqʾ)
accusative 𐽰𐽰𐽶𐽰𐽲 (ʾʾyʾq), 𐽰𐽰𐽶𐽰𐽺𐽶 (ʾʾyʾny) 𐽰𐽰𐽶𐽰𐾁𐽰𐽾𐽶𐽲 (ʾʾyʾlʾryq), 𐽰𐽰𐽶𐽰𐾁𐽰𐽾𐽺𐽶 (ʾʾyʾlʾrny)
locative 𐽰𐽰𐽶𐽰𐾀𐽰 (ʾʾyʾtʾ) 𐽰𐽰𐽶𐽰𐾁𐽰𐽾𐾀𐽰 (ʾʾyʾlʾrtʾ)
ablative 𐽰𐽰𐽶𐽰𐾀𐽶𐽺 (ʾʾyʾtyn) 𐽰𐽰𐽶𐽰𐾁𐽰𐽾𐾀𐽶𐽺 (ʾʾyʾlʾrtyn)
instrumental 𐽰𐽰𐽶𐽰𐽺 (ʾʾyʾn) 𐽰𐽰𐽶𐽰𐾁𐽰𐽾𐽶𐽺 (ʾʾyʾlʾryn)
equative 𐽰𐽰𐽶𐽰𐽽𐽰 (ʾʾyʾcʾ)
directive 𐽰𐽰𐽶𐽰𐽲𐽰𐽾𐽳 (ʾʾyʾqʾrw), 𐽰𐽰𐽶𐽰𐽾𐽰 (ʾʾyʾrʾ)
similative 𐽰𐽰𐽶𐽰𐾁𐽰𐽶𐽳 (ʾʾyʾlʾyw)

Descendants

  • Western Yugur: haja (haya)

References

  • Caferoğlu, Ahmet (1968) “aya”, in Eski Uygur Türkçesi Sözlüğü (Türk Dil Kurumu Yayınları; 260) (in Turkish), Istanbul: Edebiyat Fakültesi Basımevi, page 26
  • Clauson, Gerard (1972) “aya:”, in An Etymological Dictionary of pre-thirteenth-century Turkish, Oxford: Clarendon Press, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 267
  • Hamilton, James (2020) Korkut, Ece, Birkan, İsmet, transl., Budacı İyi Kalpli ve Kötü Kalpli Prens Masalının Uygurcası - Prens Kalyāṇaṃkara ve Pāpaṃkara Hikâyesi (in Turkish), Ankara: Türk Dil Kurumu Yayınları, →ISBN, page 29
  • Wilkens, Jens (2021) “(1)aya”, in Handwörterbuch des Altuigurischen (in German), Göttingen: Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Göttingen, page 85