- this
primarily means "rock, boulder" in
modern Basque).
These include: (h)
aizkora "axe" (h)aitzur "hoe" (h)aitzur "shears" (h)aiztur "tongs"
aizto "knife"...
-
based on
supposed derivations of the
words for "knife" (aizto), "axe" (
aizkora) and "hoe" (aitzur) from the word for "stone" (haitz), that the language...
- event. The most
important modern day
competition is
probably the
Urrezko Aizkora, the "golden axe"
competition where the best
aizkolaris from all over the...
-
Basque rural sports,
known as
Deportes Rurales in
Spanish or
Herri Kirolak in Basque, is the term used for a
number of
sports competitions rooted in the...
-
Lucien Bonaparte have
noted that the
words for "knife" (aizto), "axe" (
aizkora), and "hoe" (aitzur)
appear to
derive from the word for "stone" (haitz)...
- from
other dialects, a fact
which has
proven valuable in
discrediting the
aizkora theory (that
Basque vocabulary is
continuous from the
Stone Age).[citation...
- or
vertically disposed logs, are
generically called aizkolaritza (from
aizkora: axe). In Yorùbá mythology, the oshe (double-headed axe)
symbolises Shango...
- millennia. Some
scholars have
interpreted the
Basque words aizto 'knife' and
aizkora (variants axkora, azkora) 'axe' as
containing aitz 'stone',
which they...
-
kaixta ⟨kaïshta⟩ zur kašt wood,
stick kaxtain parruntzeko ⟨paŕuntzeko⟩
aizkora axe kher, khe, kere, khere, kerea, kera etxe kher
house kereko-egaxia ⟨kereko-egas̃ia⟩...
- sortir,
eixir irten/jalgi/elk(h)i exit, get out faya
destrau hacha destral aizkora axe
feyto hèit
hecho fet
egina done/made
ferme hidança
fianza fiança berme...