Tangut

English dictionary entry

Meanings

noun
  1. A Qiangic people of mediaeval northern China.
noun
  1. A member of the Tangut people.
name
  1. Their Tibeto-Burman language.
  2. The logographic script uniquely used to write their language.
adj
  1. Of or pertaining to the Tangut people, language or script.

Pronunciation

/ˈtɑŋ.ɡʊt/

Word forms

Tangut Tanguts more Tangut most Tangut

Etymology

From a Middle Mongol exonym used by the Mongols, which would become the Classical Mongolian ᠲᠠᠩᠭᠤᠳ (tangɣud) that was phonetically transcribed in Ming-era Early Mandarin Chinese as 唐兀_惕 (/*tʰaŋ(ŋ)ut/) in the Chinese edition of the Secret History of the Mongols (《元朝秘史》). The designation ultimately derives from Old Turkic 𐱃𐰭𐰆𐱃 (t¹ŋut¹) as attested in the 8th-century Bilgä Qaǧan stele. The English word, and similar forms in European languages, derives from Medieval Latin Tangut (*Tangunt in the Leiden manuscript) from the accounts of William of Rubruck compiled in the 1250s. The English form was attested in the writings of Richard Hakluyt who translated parts of William's accounts in the late 16th century.

Related words

txg txg ⁠ Wiktionary’s coverage of Tangut terms

Derived words

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