hanı
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Azerbaijani
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Ultimately a derivation from Proto-Turkic *ka-.[1] Cognate with Turkish hani (“where”), Old Turkic 𐰴𐰣𐰃 (qanï, “where”), Karakhanid قَنٖى (qanï̄, “where”).
Pronunciation
[edit]Adverb
[edit]hanı
- (interrogative, colloquial) where
- Hanı məndən borc götürdüyün pul? Nə vaxt qaytaracaqsan?
- Where's the money you borrowed from me? When will you pay back?
- 1939 [c. 12th century CE], Nizami Ganjavi, translated by Səməd Vurğun, Leyli və Məcnun, translation of لیلی و مجنون [Leyli o Majnun] (in Persian):
- Sən, ey öz əriylə keyf çəkən sona,
Hanı o əhd edib oturduğumuz,
Bir deyib, bir gülüb, bir durduğumuz?
Hanı vəd etdiyin o şirin visal?
Sinəmə baş qoyan səndin, ya xəyal?
Hanı bu dostluqda vəfa görməyin?- Oh you, beauty who is now enjoying life with her husband
Where are those days when we swore
To laugh and stand together
Where is the sweet encounter that you promised?
Was it you who put your head on my chest, or was it a dream?
Where is your being faithful in this friendship?
- Oh you, beauty who is now enjoying life with her husband
Usage notes
[edit]- Hanı is usually used without predicative suffix -dır, unlike other interrogatives, such as harada, which are normally suffixed with -dır. Often used at initial position.
Synonyms
[edit]See also
[edit]English | Azerbaijani |
---|---|
what | nə, (dialectal) nəmənə |
who | kim |
which | hansı |
which (in a numbered series) | neçənci |
who (by occupation) | nəçi |
who (by origin) | haralı |
where (which place) | hara, hayan, (colloquial) hanı, (dialectal) həncəri |
where (at which place) | harada, hayanda |
whither (to which place) | hara, haraya, hayana |
whence (from which place) | haradan, hayandan |
when | nə vaxt, nə zaman, haçan, (colloquial) havaxt |
why | niyə, nə üçün, neyçün |
how | necə, nətər, nə təhər, (archaic) nə tövr, nə cür, (dialectal) həncəri |
how much | nə qədər |
how many | neçə |
References
[edit]- ^ Starostin, Sergei, Dybo, Anna, Mudrak, Oleg (2003) “*kem, *Ka-”, in Etymological dictionary of the Altaic languages (Handbuch der Orientalistik; VIII.8), Leiden, New York, Köln: E.J. Brill