[bɐˈtʲar]
ПоходженняFirst recorded in the 20th century. Borrowed from Hungarian betyár (“vagabond, unemployed lad, ruffian”), from Bulgarian or Serbo-Croatian, from Ottoman Turkish بیكار (bekâr), from Persian بیکار (bêkâr, literally “unemployed”). Compare Polish, especially Lwów dialect, batiar/baciar/baciarz.
- Southwesterntramp, vagabond, ruffian
Формибатя́р(canonical, masculine, person) · batjár(romanization) · батяра́(genitive) · батярі́(nominative, plural) · батярі́в(genitive, plural) · батя́рка(feminine) · батя́р(nominative, singular) · батяра́(genitive, singular) · батяре́ві(dative, singular) · батяру́(dative, singular) · батяра́м(dative, plural) · батяра́(accusative, singular) · батярі́в(accusative, plural) · батяре́м(instrumental, singular) · батяра́ми(instrumental, plural) · батяре́ві(locative, singular) · батярі́(locative, singular) · батяра́х(locative, plural) · батя́ре(singular, vocative) · батярі́(plural, vocative)