жать

Kyrgyz

Etymology

From Proto-Turkic *yāt (alien, foreign, unfamiliar).Cognate with Old Turkic [script needed] (jat, alien, foreign), Kazakh жат (jat), Uzbek yot (alien, foreign).

Noun

жать • (jat) (Arabic spelling جات)

  1. alien, strange, foreign (not recognized as familiar, a friend or part of one's community)
  2. unfamiliar

Russian

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [ʐatʲ]
  • (file)

Etymology 1

Inherited from Proto-Slavic *žęti; cognate with Old Church Slavonic жѧти (žęti), 1sg. жьмѫ (žĭmǫ).

Verb

жать • (žatʹ) impf (perfective сжать or пожа́ть)

  1. to press, to squeeze
    жать ру́куžatʹ rúkushake hands
  2. (sports) to benchpress, to lift
  3. to pinch, to hurt, to be tight
    о́бувь жмётóbuvʹ žmjotthe shoes are tight (too small)
  4. to press out, to squeeze out
  5. to oppress, to draw near
    сро́ки жмутsróki žmutwe are reaching the deadline
Conjugation
Derived terms
verbs

Etymology 2

Inherited from Proto-Slavic *žęti; cognate with Old Church Slavonic жѧти (žęti), 1sg. жьнѭ (žĭnjǫ).

Verb

жать • (žatʹ) impf (perfective сжать or пожа́ть)

  1. to reap, to crop
    что посе́ешь, то и пожнёшьšto poséješʹ, to i požnjóšʹas you sow, so shall you reap
Conjugation
Derived terms
verbs
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