From function (n.) + -al (1), or from Medieval Latin functionalis


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Bog'liq
etimology

word (n.)


Old English word "speech, talk, utterance, sentence, statement, news, report, word," from Proto-Germanic *wurda- (source also of Old Saxon, Old Frisian word, Dutch woord, Old High German, German wort, Old Norse orð, Gothic waurd), from PIE *were- (3) "speak, say" (see verb).

102. Roq
103. Rux


RUX Bu ot ПРСda [rox\ shaklvda (243), ТжРСda rux shaklvda (ТжРС 329) keltirilgan; oʻzbek tiliga tojik tilvdagi shakli olingan; 'shahmat oʻyini donalarining taxtaning birinchi qator kataklarining ikki chekkasida joylashadigan, tik va yotiq yoʻnalishda harakat qiladigan sipoh (türa)\maʼnosini anglatadi (OʻTIL, I, 629).
104. Synchrone
1660s, "existing or happening at the same time," from Late Latin synchronus "simultaneous," from Greek synkhronos "happening at the same time," from syn- "together" (see syn-) + khronos "time" (see chrono-). Meaning "recurring at the same successive instants of time" is attested from 1670s. 
105. Ja
106. Ex
ex- 
word-forming element, in English meaning usually "out of, from," but also "upwards, completely, deprive of, without," and "former;" from Latin ex "out of, from within; from which time, since; according to; in regard to," from PIE *eghs "out" (source also of Gaulish ex-, Old Irish ess-, Old Church Slavonic izu, Russian iz). In some cases also from Greek cognate exek. PIE *eghs had comparative form *eks-tero and superlative *eks-t(e)r-emo-. Often reduced to e- before -b--d--g-, consonantal -i--l--m--n--v- (as in eludeemergeevaporate, etc.).

108. Uz
109. Ko'l


110. G'am
111. serpent (n.)
c. 1300, "limbless reptile," also the tempter in Genesis iii.1-5, from Old French serpent, sarpent "snake, serpent" (12c.), from Latin serpentem (nominative serpens) "snake; creeping thing," also the name of a constellation, from present participle of serpere "to creep," from PIE *serp- "to crawl, creep" (source also of Sanskrit sarpati "creeps," sarpah "serpent;" Greek herpein "to creep," herpeton "serpent;" Albanian garper "serpent").

Used figuratively of things spiral or regularly sinuous, such as a type of musical instrument (1730). Serpent's tongue as figurative of venomous or stinging speech is from mistaken medieval notion that the serpent's tongue was its "sting." Serpent's tongue also was a name given to fossil shark's teeth (c. 1600).


112. money (n.)

mid-13c., monie, "funds, means, anything convertible into money;" c. 1300, "coinage, coin, metal currency," from Old French monoie "money, coin, currency; change" (Modern French monnaie), from Latin moneta "place for coining money, mint; coined money, money, coinage," from Moneta, a title or surname of the Roman goddess Juno, near whose temple on the Capitoline Hill money was coined (and in which perhaps the precious metal was stored); from monere "advise, warn, admonish" (on the model of stative verbs in -ere; see monitor (n.)), by tradition with the sense of "admonishing goddess," which is sensible, but the etymology is difficult. A doublet of mint (n.2)).


113. Til qadimgi turkiy tilda ham shunday ma’noni anglatgan bu ot asli “gapir” ma’nosini anglatgan ti- fe’lidan –l qo’shimchasi bilan yasalgan ti+l=til
114. iz qadimgi turkiy tilde ham shunday ma’noni anglatgan bu ot asli ы:з tarzida talaffuz qilingan, o’sha davrlardayoq ы unlisining avval cho’ziqlik, keyinroq qattiqlik belgisi yo’qolgan: ы:з> ыз>iz
115. Phonetic "representing vocal sounds," from Modern Latin phoneticus (Zoega, 1797), from Greek phōnētikos "vocal," from phōnētos "to be spoken, utterable," verbal adjective of phōnein "to speak clearly, utter," from phōnē "sound, voice," from PIE root *bha- (2) "to speak, tell, say" (see fame (n.))
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