муҥ

See also: Appendix:Variations of "mun"

Southern Altai

Etymology 1

From Proto-Turkic *bïŋ (thousand). Cognate with Kazakh мың (myñ), Kyrgyz миң (miŋ) ,Crimean Tatar biñ, Kumyk минг (miñ), Tatar мең (meñ), Azerbaijani bin, Turkish bin, Turkmen müň, Uzbek ming, Khakas муң (muñ), Shor муң, Tuvan муң (muñ), Western Yugur meŋ, Yakut мыҥ (mıñ), etc.

Numeral

муҥ • (muŋ)

  1. thousand

Etymology 2

From Proto-Turkic *buŋ. Cognate to these reconstruction terms.

Noun

муҥ • (muŋ)

  1. grief

References

N. A. Baskakov, Toščakova N.A, editor (1947), “муҥ”, in Ojrotsko-Russkij Slovarʹ [Oyrot-Russian Dictionary], Moscow: M.: OGIZ, →ISBN

Yakut

Etymology

From Proto-Turkic *buŋ. Cognate to these reconstruction terms.

Noun

муҥ • (muñ)

  1. grief, torment
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    t=misfortune, sorrow
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    See synonyms at сор (sor).
  2. limit, boundary, (by extension) the fullest extent of something
    See synonyms at кырыы (kırıı).
    муҥ саатарmuñ saatarat least, as a last resort

Derived terms

  • муҥнаах (muñnaaq, hard, burdensome, sufferer)
  • сор-муҥ (sor-muñ) and муҥ-сор (muñ-sor), both meaning "anguish", "suffering"
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