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The Exile: A novel about Taras Shevchenko

Page 47

by Zinaida Tulub


  Kamcha, whip

  Kara, black

  Karligach, swallow

  Kerege, lattice framework of a yurt, over which thick felt (koshma) is stretched

  Ketmen, a kind of hoe

  Kistau, winter pasture

  Kshi apa, the youngest mother; the children of the elder wives called thus the youngest wife of their father

  Kulash, a unit of length of about one and a half meters (the dis­tance between the fingertips of a man’s outspread hands)

  Kyit, a present which the bride’s parents gave to their future son-in-law and his parents on the day of engagement

  M

  Malakliai, man’s cap of fur or felt

  Manty, largo steamed dumplings with mutton filling

  N

  Nuker, member of the retinue of a bai, khan, sultan, or any other dignitary

  S

  Saba, kumiss-skin

  Saukele, tall fur cap of a bride, embroidered with silver or gold thread

  Shakpar, war club with a thick, sometimes spiked, end

  Shangarak, top hole in a yurt, which serves as a vent for the fire and is covered, if necessary with a tunduk

  Soyil, a sword with a long shaft instead of a hilt

  Suuk Tiube, (lit. cold hill), a hill between the present cities of Alma-Ata and Frunze

  T

  Tamga, the coat of arms of a kin

  Toi, a three-day family holiday held on the occasion of a significant event (the birth of a child, a wedding, and the like)

  Tomaga, head cap for a golden eagle or falcon, embroidered with gold thread or beads and owl feather

  Tugir, a tripod perch for a golden eagle in a yurt

  Tunduk, a piece of felt to cover the top hole in a yurt

  Tyulengut, bodyguard of a khan or rich bai. The tyulenguts were most­ly descendants of slaves, or the poorest members of a kin

  Y

  Yassak, a tax the authorities of czarist Russia levied on the Kazakh people

  Z

  Zakat, an annual alms tax that each Muslim is expected to pay to be used for charitable or religious purposes

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