таимень
See also: таймень
Old Novgorodian
Etymology
Borrowed from Finnic languages, such as Karelian taimen, Finnish taimen (“brown trout”), ultimately from Proto-Finnic *taimën, from *taimi (“trout, salmon”), further origins unclear. First attested in c. 1360‒1380. Compare Russian тайме́нь (tajménʹ), Middle Russian таймень (tajmenʹ), first attested only in 1628. Derivative тайменина (tajmenina, “taimen meat”) since 1590, таймешекъ (tajmešek, “small taimen”) since 1626.
Pronunciation
- Hyphenation: таи‧ме‧нь
Noun
таимень • (taimenĭ) m[1]
- brown trout (Salmo trutta)
- Synonym: торпицꙗ (torpicʹja)
- c. 1360‒1380, Берестяная грамота № 280 [Birchbark letter no. 280][2], Novgorod:
- … ·г҃· таимени ·в҃· просоле и ·е҃· сигово ·е҃· таимени ѧко[л]и[хо]
- … 3 taimeni 2 prosole i ·je:· sigovo ·je:· taimeni jęko[l]i[xo]
- … 3 taimen, 2 of them lightly salted, and 5 whitefish and 5 Yakovlev taimen
Descendants
- → Middle Russian: таймень (tajmenʹ)
References
- ^ Zaliznyak, Andrey (2004), Древненовгородский диалект [Old Novgorod dialect][1] (in Russian), 2nd edition, Moscow: LRC Publishing House, →ISBN, page 805
Further reading
- “таимень”, in “Birchbark Letters Corpus”, in Russian National Corpus, https://ruscorpora.ru, 2003–2025