چیقمق

Old Anatolian Turkish

Etymology

From Proto-Turkic *čïk- (to go out).

Verb

چِیقْمَقْ • (çıqmaq)

  1. (intransitive) to exit

Descendants

  • Azerbaijani: çıxmaq
  • Gagauz: çıkmaa
  • Ottoman Turkish: چیقمق (çıkmak), چقمق (çıkmak)

Ottoman Turkish

Alternative forms

Etymology

Inherited from Old Anatolian Turkish چِیقْمَقْ (çıqmaq), from Proto-Turkic *čïk- (to go out). Cognate with Azerbaijani çıxmaq, Bashkir сығыу (sığıw), Kazakh шығу (şyğu), Kyrgyz чыгуу (cıguu), Turkmen çykmak, Uyghur چىقماق (chiqmaq) and Uzbek chiqmoq.

Verb

چیقمق • (çıkmak) (third-person singular aorist چیقار (çıkar))

  1. (intransitive) to exit, go out, to go away from a place or situation
  2. (intransitive) to spring up, pop up, to appear suddenly or come rapidly into existence
  3. (intransitive) to set forth, to start on a journey
    • 1927 October, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, Nutuk[1], page 5:
      ۱۳۳۵ سنه‌سی مایسنك ۱۹ نجی كونی صامسونه چیقدم.
      1335 senesi mayısın 19'uncu günü Samsun'a çıktım
      On the 19th of May in the year 1335, I landed in Samsun.

Derived terms

  • چیقار (çıkar, that issues, goes forth)
  • چیقش (çıkış, a manner of coming out)
  • چیقشمق (çıkışmak, to enter into competion or rivalry)
  • چیقم (çıkım, a single effort of going out)
  • چیقماز (çıkmaz, that does not go out)
  • چیقمه (çıkma, act of coming or going out)
  • چیقینتی (çıkıntı, projection)

Descendants

Further reading