< Reconstruction:Proto-Turkic
Reconstruction:Proto-Turkic/ïnan-
Proto-Turkic
Alternative reconstructions
- *inen-
Etymology
Reflexive of *ïna-, related to Ottoman Turkish [script needed] (inak, “trustful (person)”), Turkish inak (“dogma”); Ottoman Turkish [script needed] (inam, “bailee; faith”), Turkish inam (“deposit”), Azerbaijani inam (“believing, trust, faith”) and Kumyk инам (inam, “faith”). Relation with Common Turkic *ïšan-, *išen- (“to believe, trust”) is not clear.
Verb
*ïnan-
- to believe
- to trust, rely on
Descendants
- → Mongolian: үнэн (ünen, “reality, truth”)[1]
- Oghur:
- Chuvash: ӗнен (ĕnen)
- Common Turkic:
- Oghuz:
- Old Anatolian Turkish: [Term?]
- Azerbaijani: inanmaq
- Ottoman Turkish: [Term?]
- Turkish: inanmak
- Turkmen: ynanmak
- Salar: ınan
- Old Anatolian Turkish: [Term?]
- Karluk:
- Karakhanid: [script needed] (ınanmaq)
- Uzbek: inonmoq
- Uyghur: ئىنەنمەك (inenmek)
- Karakhanid: [script needed] (ınanmaq)
- Kipchak:
- North Kipchak:
- Bashkir: инаныу (inanïw)
- Tatar: инанырга (inanırga)
- West Kipchak:
- Crimean Tatar: inanmaq
- Kumyk: инанмакъ (inanmaq)
- Karachay-Balkar: [script needed] (iynan-)
- Karaim: инанмакъ
- South Kipchak:
- Caspian:
- Kazakh: нану (nanw)
- Kyrgyz-Kipchak:
- Kyrgyz: ынануу (ınanuu)
- Caspian:
- North Kipchak:
- Siberian:
- Old Turkic: [script needed] (ınan-)
- Old Uyghur: [script needed] (ınan-)
- South Siberian:
- Sayan:
- ⇒ Tuvan: ынаныш (ınanış)
- Sayan:
References
- Nişanyan, Sevan (2002–), “Proto-Turkic/ïnan-”, in Nişanyan Sözlük