[sɑχˈsɯ]
OriginFrom Old Anatolian Turkish [script needed] (saqsı); cognate with Karakhanid سَسِق (sasiq, “potteryware”), Turkish saksı, Uzbek sassiq (“stinky”).
Perhaps the Old Anatolian term is a metathesised form of *sas-kï, ultimately from Proto-Common Turkic *sasï- (“become rotten; stink; give off smoke”), in turn from < *sassï < *sarsï < *sar (“swamp, mud”), a by-form of *siāŕ (“marsh, dirt”), whence Turkish saz (“reed”)?
- clay used in pottery
- ceramics, potteryware
- shard (broken pieces of pottery)
Formssaxsını(accusative, definite) · saxsılar(plural) · saxsı(nominative, singular) · saxsılar(nominative, plural) · saxsını(accusative, definite, singular) · saxsıları(accusative, definite, plural) · saxsıya(dative, singular) · saxsılara(dative, plural) · saxsıda(locative, singular) · saxsılarda(locative, plural) · saxsıdan(ablative, singular) · saxsılardan(ablative, plural) · saxsının(definite, genitive, singular) · saxsıların(definite, genitive, plural) · saxsım(first-person, nominative, possessive, singular) · saxsılarım(first-person, nominative, possessive, singular) · saxsın(nominative, possessive, second-person, singular) · saxsıların(nominative, possessive, second-person, singular) · saxsısı(nominative, possessive, singular, third-person) · saxsıları(nominative, possessive, singular, third-person)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0