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Definition 2024


Saz

Saz

See also: saz

Luxembourgish

Noun

Saz m (plural Sätz)

  1. sentence
  2. jump, leap
  3. (tennis) set
  4. (mathematics) theorem

saz

saz

See also: Saz

English

Noun

saz (plural sazes or sazzes)

  1. The baglama.

Translations


Lojban

Rafsi

saz

  1. rafsi of sazri.

Turkish

Etymology 1

From Ottoman Turkish ساز (sāz, a stringed musical instrument), from Old Anatolian Turkish [script needed] (sāz, musical instrument), from Persian ساز (sâz).

Noun

saz (definite accusative sazı, plural sazlar)

  1. (music) baglama
  2. (music, uncommon) instruments in general
Derived terms
  • saz takımı
  • ince saz
  • saz eseri

Etymology 2

From Ottoman Turkish صاز (saz, rush, reed), from Old Anatolian Turkish [script needed] (sāz),[1] from Proto-Turkic *siāŕ (marsh, dirt).[2] Compare Hungarian sár (mud), a Turkic borrowing. From an early date “reed”, as a plant growing in marshy environments, replaced the original sense, therefore صازلق (sazlık, marsh, marshy place, swamp) was also interpreted as “reed, rush bed”.[1] See Turkish sazlık (marshy place, reed bed), compare Uyghur سازلىق (sazliq, swamp), Kyrgyz саздак (sazdak, swamp), Turkmen sāzlyk (reed bed, rubbish place overgrown with plants).

Noun

saz (definite accusative sazı, plural sazlar)

  1. (botany) rush, bulrush; cattail; sedge; reed
Related terms
  • sazlı
  • sazsız
  • sazlık

Adjective

saz (comparative daha saz, superlative en saz)

  1. (not comparable) made of rushes, bulrushes, cattails, sedge, or reeds
  2. (comparable, archaic) pale
    Saz benizliPale faced

Declension

References

  1. 1 2 Nişanyan, Sevan (2015-04-14), saz”, in Nişanyan Sözlük
  2. Starostin, Sergei; Dybo, Anna; Mudrak, Oleg (2003), *siaŕ”, in Etymological dictionary of the Altaic languages (Handbuch der Orientalistik; VIII.8), Leiden, New York, Köln: E.J. Brill