[jɑˈnɯχ]
OriginFrom yan- (“to burn”) + -ıq.
- fumes, smell of (something) burning
- burn, scorch (a physical injury caused by heat or caustic chemicals)
- spite, malice, grudge
- envy
- damaged or injured by fire or heat.
- carbonised.
“yanıq çörək” — brunt bread
- rotten, putrid, decayed
- frail, weak, infirm
- colloquialconstantly horny, oversexed, lewd
Formsyanığı(accusative, definite) · yanıqlar(plural) · yanıq(nominative, singular) · yanıqlar(nominative, plural) · yanığı(accusative, definite, singular) · yanıqları(accusative, definite, plural) · yanığa(dative, singular) · yanıqlara(dative, plural) · yanıqda(locative, singular) · yanıqlarda(locative, plural) · yanıqdan(ablative, singular) · yanıqlardan(ablative, plural) · yanığın(definite, genitive, singular) · yanıqların(definite, genitive, plural) · yanığım(first-person, nominative, possessive, singular) · yanıqlarım(first-person, nominative, possessive, singular) · yanığın(nominative, possessive, second-person, singular) · yanıqların(nominative, possessive, second-person, singular) · yanığı(nominative, possessive, singular, third-person) · yanıqları(nominative, possessive, singular, third-person)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0