хач

Russian

Etymology

From a reanalysis of ха́чик (xáčik) as хач (xač) + -ик (-ik) (compare зонт (zont)), from a common Armenian male given name Խաչիկ (Xačʿik), diminutive of Խաչատուր (Xačʿatur), which means “given by cross” and is composed of խաչ (xačʿ, cross) + տուր (tur, something given), from տալ (tal, to give).

The stereotyping of the name Khachik after Armenians perhaps is explained in part by the very popular character of товарищ Хачикян (Рубик-джан) from the 1977 Soviet movie Mimino, played by an Armenian actor Frunzik Mkrtchyan.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [xat͡ɕ]
  • (file)

Noun

хач (xač) m anim (genitive хача́, nominative plural хачи́, genitive plural хаче́й, feminine хачи́ха)

  1. (offensive, ethnic slur) Armenian person
  2. (offensive, ethnic slur) commonly of any person native to the Caucasus region (Georgian, Azerbaijani, Chechen, Armenian, etc.)

Declension

Synonyms

Derived terms

  • хачьё (xačʹjó)

Tatar

Etymology

Borrowed from Armenian խաչ (xačʿ, cross).

Noun

хач (xaç) (Latin spelling xaç)

  1. cross
    Кызыл Хач — Red cross

Udi

Etymology

Borrowed from Armenian խաչ (xačʿ, cross).

Noun

хач (χač)

  1. cross
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