Дуже фацна чиста старовіцка співанка гуцульська)) дай Бог вам всього файного)) з поклоном і з Шепота Їзвірского)) із Нью Йорка) дєкую Богу що чую рідну мелодію в Нью Йорку)
єк кєшко жити без наших ридних Карпат😍 - без запаху розигрітої на сонці смоли на смереці, без запаху шушеребків навесні, без запашних гирских трав, без студеної чистої води з чуркала. З поклоном з Польші а родом з Путилови😘
it exist an ancient forgotten connection of iran/media(the medes) with the carpathian hutsul people (living in romanian suceava, maramures & ukrainian ivano-frankivsk, chirnivci, zakarpatia), called in 1100 AD the huci tribe (later came the romanian -ul ending), hutsuls have earliest roots which goes way back to the median busi tribe who were listed by herodot (lived around 450 BC) as one of the ancient westiranic median tribes the busae. an oldiranic typicalness of some languages/dialects was that not rarely the bh sound shifted to h sound: busi>husi/huzi>huci & some variations of hutsul in romania are huzul or hutan. herodotus wrote about colonists from media called sigunians (shuhani is the main luri dialect & the lurs counts as one of the descendants of the antique medes) who settled before herodot's time in transylvania. sigynians wore median clothing, had many median customs and they themselfes said (to herodot) they are descendants of the medes. i can bring some proofs/facts/wordsimilarities/explainings/theorizations to show the direct connection of proto-hutsuls with the medes, concretely median busae tribe & the sigynnian branch who settled in westromania. genetically hutsuls are in first case a mixture of dacians/vlahs+slavs but from their origin (the old substrat) an iranic sigynnian people. about when these median colonists sigynians came to transylvania exist 2 options, they left their homeland and moved via turkey to there around 640 BC (when kyaxares were made for 28 years to a vassal in his own kingdom) or 540 BC (when the median kingdom collapsed and persians took over). the historian strabo (63BC-23AD) wrote about siginians who lived in the southwest caspia sea/westernmost elborz-mountains region (by the way elborz and east-carparthian areas looks in some places some way similar) like gilan, mazandaran & talysh mountains etc., these siginians were the ones who stayed in media and didn't leave like herodot's sigynnes. strabo said about these ones that in general they practise persians customs and he mentioned like herodot their small horses race which were shaggy long haired flat-nosed/short-snooted ponies that pulled a chariot/cart in a four-horse-team, maybe that small horse race is related to the eastcarpathian hutul-horses/ponies (as a newer mixed breeding that originated from the sigynnian horses). i go back to the topic with proofs that the hutsuls were in fact of iranic median sigynian origin, the ethnicon itself (besides the most possible explaining that it comes from the median busi tribe name) has also another 4 theories of it's meaning (until today nobody could proof what the ethnonym hucul really means), the 4 other theories what it means are all median(=gilaki/garmsiri/etc.) cognates: 1. it comes from the gilaki word for "mountain"="qukh", that leads to gukh+ul(noun ending) so the proto-huculian(sigynian-orientated) word/ethnonym would mean "people from the mountains/mountainous people". 2. gilaki word "houz" for "lake" would mean "people who live by the lake" 3. garmsiri word "guch"="ram/ibex/capricorn/battering-ram/mountain-goat" that means ghuculs are "people associated with rams/got something to do with rams" 4. gilaki word "ghut" for "immersion" would mean "(water)diver/aquanaut". herodot speculated what the name sigynni could mean from what he heared or knew, he used to associate the name with the meaning "spear" and on the other hand with "traders/hucksters". what the meaning of the word medes is, can maybe explain the zazaki etymology of that ethnonym, in this case the medes would have something to do with mines/mining. the proto-hutsul ethnos was surely formed in the maramures region and some bordering north-transilvania areas/northwest-romania where the sigynians sometime between 100-500 AD mixed with the surrounding dacian population & vlahian shepherds, a bit later came the slavic component(tiverians & whitecroats) in their ethnogenesis mainly in the bordering southern ivano-frankivsk/zakarpatia/chirnivcy regions since 600 AD. sigunnians had 2000 years ago surely 2 median identities: the word siguni has to be the same as shuhani, what means one of the main dialects of lur people or northern-luri language, so it's showed their median branch language-identity, but the other identity was the tribe-identity the word that would later become the ethnicon hucul that means they had seen themselfes as belonging to the husi/huzi/huci tribe what is a diactical changing of the word busi, their busae tribe identity. also i think that the meaning "sigyni" can all in all be understood as "people who are originally from a rocky and stony mountainous area or region" cuz if you take a talishi etymology for that then "sygh" is "stone" or if you take the kurdish etymology then "chiya/shah" is "mountain" and "qij" is "rock"......
following words are typical hutsulian & have ties to westiranic median modern descendants' languages: an interessting exclusive huculian word (that is not to be found in ukrainian language) with etymological ties to neo-median(luri/gilaki/balochi/kurdi/behdinani/leki/garmsiri) cause it sounds related to these 2 gilaki words by meaning "hooz"(lake/pond) & "ghut"(immersion/diving) is huculian word "ghuk" and means "waterfall" so connected with watermasses/lake/diving. another exclusive huculian word (not found in ukrainian language) is "kootüga" and means "dog" while in the luri language "katu" & in kurdish "kuti" and "kuchik" is "dog", these words are really close to each other and belong to median dialects from origin. a huculian word (not in ukrainian language again) for "farm-animals/domestic-animals/livestock-animals" is "marga" what you can compare to the luri & gilaki word "morg" for "chicken/hen/rooster" what surely is related together, possibly "marga" is also related to the sorani-kurdish "manga"="cow". then of course the romanian and hutsulian word "branza" & "bryndza" (in the 14th century also as a variation with a ch sound brancha) is translated as "cheese", also often as "cream-cheese", it's a word from the romanian and southwest-ukraine bordering carpathians & many romanian, hutsuls and ukrainians try to find the origins of that word, i searched for the translations of the word cheese in the most languages and no language has a similar word for cheese like branza, so it sure don't came from slavic or romance languages, the only language i found that has similarities with that word is the westiranic balochi word "ponch" for "curd-cheese/quark-cheese/soft white cheese type paste/cream-cheese/cancoillotte/processed cheese", so if you look that in the 14th century the word branza/brynza(commonly variation bronza) had also a ch sound variation, then broncha would be really close to the balochi ponch and has the same meaning, but also important is that it is connected to an other hutsulian word, to "banosh", a traditional dish of hutsul cuisine, a "porridge/grits" cooked in sour cream, both banosh & bryndza are originally from carpathian hutsul region and other neighbouring regions or countries adopted that food, but etymologically both words are westiranic median proto-balochi closest related in origin, "banosh" is a creamy porridge and etymologically identical to balochi "ponch"="quark/cream-cheese/cream-curd/cooked-cheese" cuz i principially see the etymology of ponch & branza & banosh as connected with the meaning cream,mash,curd,yoghurt,porridge,puree,cancoillotte,creamcheese,pesto,paste,gruel,grits,ect. as their roots and not with the meaning real cheese or directly corn groats. a typical ukrainian word what means untypical for the other slavic languages (really possibly borrowed by ukrainians from the carpathian regions where hutsuls live) is the word "gharny"="great" which can be compared to the garmsirian bashkardi word "gohrt"="big" but not so sure about that one, better would be to see the balochi word "shar"="good" as of same origin/roots with the ukrainian "harny/gharny"="great/good/amazing", but the bashkardi word "gohrt" fits really good to the typical ukrainian word "gurt"="group", a group is big so synonymous to the meaning big/large & by the way that word gurt i really think has etymological ties to the ethnonym kurd cuz there are 2 versions explaining the ethnonym of the kurds either with the meaning big collected group/great-group of related tribes/people-group or a more chauvinistic meaning like the big ones/huge and strong people=xurt (of course the most common theories about kurds' ethnonym is that it came from an adopted word from iraq "kard" meaning "nomad" used by arabs and persians for kurds or it came from the name of a mountain range in southeast-turkey "gudi/gurdi/giordi")......
there's another word that is only typical for ukraine "khata"="house" what shares the same origin/meaning like the yazdi-behdinani word "khäda/khda"="house". the hutsulian & ukrainian word "daraba"="raft/float/catamaran/bobber" is generally of westiranic origin (maybe also with some influence or a bit fusion of slavic in that word), it seems that "daraba" is identical to oldpersian "daraya(m)"="river/sea", it's possible that from a mix of slavic "korab"="ship" + westiranic "daraya"="river/sea" resulted "daraba", further a relevant role could play here also kurdish "zorav"="torrent/creek/beck/swollen-stream/raging-current/gush/flush/rapid-brook/mountaintorrent/waterrace/whitewater/fastflowing-stream", on the other hand is in first case "daraba" most likely a combination of 2 westiranic words (like tajiki or persian) "daro"+"aba" and would be understood as the "entering/input/influx/addition/enter/entrance/lead-in/ushering/insertion/interpolation/ingress/entry (for or to) the water" or "dar"+"aba"="given one (for or to) the water", but more possible is the combination of kurdish "dar"="wood/timber/lumber" + "ab"="water" (also romanian "apa"="water" is here possible because it's surely an iranic sigynnian word that came into the proto-romanian language), that would be resulted in "water-wood/water-timber" (in the scence of a water-board), one last possibility is behdinani "dyr"+"aw", what you can understand as "something that's far in the water" or "something for being far in the water" or "something that gets far via the water", i think the more plausible and right etymology of daraba is the kurdish combi variant. the ukrainian and hutsulian "kulish"="thick soup/pottage/millet porridge with meat,mushrooms,tomatoes"(in the carpathian version often the porridge is done from maize) is said to be mostpossibly of hungarian këles origin but alternatively it can be of westiranic median origin when you compare it with (northern) kurdish "keli/kelink"="something simmering/boiling/seething/cooked/scalded/fumed/cookable", that kulish and also köles is of median proto-kurdisch dialect origin can proof the word-meaning if you compare it with some other indoeuropean languages' meaning of the words millet & grits and related words to millet like germanic hirse, gries & grütze/grits or slavic grechka, these words have originally the meaning "made warm" so very close to kurdish "keli" by meaning, but etymologically kulish and köles are very close to "keli" or "kelink" (that dish have to be originally from southwest-ukraine/northwest-romania so some hungarians have lived in the western border-near zone there in some times). an ukrainian verb that came at least 1000 years ago from southwest-ukraine/north-romania into the language is "shanuvati"(-vati=verb-ending)="beeing a fan/admirer/liker/follower/honourer/lover/appreciator of someone" and has roots in iran, it's identical to persian "jan"="dear/liked/adored/favoured one" & "soul" but in older persian 2000 years ago it sounded like "hyan", the kurdish equivalent is "chan" and "chänik", in ukrainian dictionary "shana" is translated as "the feeling of being esteemed", also the romanian word "chinsti"="to honour/esteem/appreciate/adore/value/respect" proofs that the original word was from carpathia & north-romania (because you can see the -sti is a word-ending and that word is surely not of a romance language origin and also fit well together chinsti with kurdish chänik, oldpersian hyan & ukrainian shana), the germany/poland-theory about that word is not sure. in western-ukraine is sometimes used the dialectical word "chugha"="ungrown mountain", it's related either to gilaki "quh"="mountain" or talishi "sygh"="stone" (taleshi and gilaki are neighbour-languages from northwest iran) or kudish "chiya"(sometimes also "shax")="mountain" (in zazaki is "koyan"="mountain") or kurdish "qyj/qysh"="rock", but that talishi word "sygh" is of the same origin and close in meaning related to another word, to hutsulian "chughilo"(-ilo is an noun-ending with adjective character)="notch or indentation in a stone" and "flowstone", both ("sygh" & "chugh-") have actually the meaning "stone", they are similar so hutsulian "chughilo" is of median talishi-alike (atropatena-media) dialect origin, but also of proto-kurdish origin because there's a kurdish word "qax"="indentation in a stone or rock", it is even much closer in the meaning to "chughilo" than the talishi word......
another hutsulian word is "dyadühna"(-na is an adjective ending but it's an noun)="fever", there's a possibility that it's of westiranic median origin because it could be identical to balochi "thäf"="fever" or kurdish "tehn"="temperature/warmness" or on the other side it can be related to kurdish "därd"="illness" (if you see -ühna as a word-ending). the typical ukrainian or hutsulian word "gudzica"="button" came really sure from median laki and zazaki alike dialects, you can compare "gudzica" with zazaki "gozage"="button" & laki "gijik"="button". hutsulian word "galica" for "snake/serpent" could be identical with the persian meaning and etymology "lair/den/hideaway/animal-hideout/animal's burrow/animal's construction/animal's safehouse/slip-angle/hidey-hole/shelter/bolthole/loophole/something recessed/silt/alluvial sand/quicksand/shifting-sands/drift-sand/fluidized sand/flowing or running ground/seepage/ooze/percolation/something seeping/something slicky/mud" and is called "gel" in persian, that word has a characteristical connection to hutsulian "galica" because a snake has a behaviour/comportment/nature/character/attributes/properties/features/peculiarities/appearence/look that fits to persian "gel" like for example in the scence of behavior or character 'wriggling/sliding/gliding/crawling/burrowing/seeping into or under something (like sand or soft earth or a hole or somewhere else)' and also are many snake-kinds known for 'having a coloured camouflage', a snake is 'often in a hideout' so another word the kurdish "hilan"="hidden/preserved" have to be also related to it, or in the scence of appearence/look & palpation/tactuality but also style of the motion/agility/movement 'slick/slippery/smooth/slushy/squidgy/supple/sleek/slippy/slithery', so -ica in "galica" is a later slavic female noun-ending that was combined with "gal-" what is related (via sigynnian language intermixing in the east-carpathians) to persian "gel" and really possible kurdish "hilan" (verb "hilanin"="to hide oneself from someone"), maybe also relevant could be here for seeing better the whole spectrum to mention the mazandarani "gäl"="soil" and balochi "kel"="hole". the last word is huculian "bardka" for "axe" while in the "modern-zoroastrian" behdinani/gabri language (spoken by the behdinan people in yazdi dialect) "barda" is translated as "spade"(including spade-chissel?), they are surely of media kingdom origin related words.
Felicitari ! Sanatate !
Doamne ajuta !
Magnifique? C'A EVOQUE MON ADOLESSANCE JE SUIS PROFONDEMENT TOUCHE !!! MERCI
Дуже фацна чиста старовіцка співанка гуцульська)) дай Бог вам всього файного)) з поклоном і з Шепота Їзвірского)) із Нью Йорка) дєкую Богу що чую рідну мелодію в Нью Йорку)
єк кєшко жити без наших ридних Карпат😍 - без запаху розигрітої на сонці смоли на смереці, без запаху шушеребків навесні, без запашних гирских трав, без студеної чистої води з чуркала. З поклоном з Польші а родом з Путилови😘
@@alnam7573 так дуже сумно(( тиняємося світами в пошуках доброго життя(( а там нічого(( ніяк не звикнути, сумую за моєю Путиловою) тримаймося))
Дуже гарно, чисто у нас у косівські поляні, така новнта! ❤️👍
Huțul naș bahato zdorovia ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
it exist an ancient forgotten connection of iran/media(the medes) with the carpathian hutsul people (living in romanian suceava, maramures & ukrainian ivano-frankivsk, chirnivci, zakarpatia), called in 1100 AD the huci tribe (later came the romanian -ul ending), hutsuls have earliest roots which goes way back to the median busi tribe who were listed by herodot (lived around 450 BC) as one of the ancient westiranic median tribes the busae. an oldiranic typicalness of some languages/dialects was that not rarely the bh sound shifted to h sound: busi>husi/huzi>huci & some variations of hutsul in romania are huzul or hutan. herodotus wrote about colonists from media called sigunians (shuhani is the main luri dialect & the lurs counts as one of the descendants of the antique medes) who settled before herodot's time in transylvania. sigynians wore median clothing, had many median customs and they themselfes said (to herodot) they are descendants of the medes. i can bring some proofs/facts/wordsimilarities/explainings/theorizations to show the direct connection of proto-hutsuls with the medes, concretely median busae tribe & the sigynnian branch who settled in westromania. genetically hutsuls are in first case a mixture of dacians/vlahs+slavs but from their origin (the old substrat) an iranic sigynnian people. about when these median colonists sigynians came to transylvania exist 2 options, they left their homeland and moved via turkey to there around 640 BC (when kyaxares were made for 28 years to a vassal in his own kingdom) or 540 BC (when the median kingdom collapsed and persians took over). the historian strabo (63BC-23AD) wrote about siginians who lived in the southwest caspia sea/westernmost elborz-mountains region (by the way elborz and east-carparthian areas looks in some places some way similar) like gilan, mazandaran & talysh mountains etc., these siginians were the ones who stayed in media and didn't leave like herodot's sigynnes. strabo said about these ones that in general they practise persians customs and he mentioned like herodot their small horses race which were shaggy long haired flat-nosed/short-snooted ponies that pulled a chariot/cart in a four-horse-team, maybe that small horse race is related to the eastcarpathian hutul-horses/ponies (as a newer mixed breeding that originated from the sigynnian horses). i go back to the topic with proofs that the hutsuls were in fact of iranic median sigynian origin, the ethnicon itself (besides the most possible explaining that it comes from the median busi tribe name) has also another 4 theories of it's meaning (until today nobody could proof what the ethnonym hucul really means), the 4 other theories what it means are all median(=gilaki/garmsiri/etc.) cognates: 1. it comes from the gilaki word for "mountain"="qukh", that leads to gukh+ul(noun ending) so the proto-huculian(sigynian-orientated) word/ethnonym would mean "people from the mountains/mountainous people". 2. gilaki word "houz" for "lake" would mean "people who live by the lake" 3. garmsiri word "guch"="ram/ibex/capricorn/battering-ram/mountain-goat" that means ghuculs are "people associated with rams/got something to do with rams" 4. gilaki word "ghut" for "immersion" would mean "(water)diver/aquanaut". herodot speculated what the name sigynni could mean from what he heared or knew, he used to associate the name with the meaning "spear" and on the other hand with "traders/hucksters". what the meaning of the word medes is, can maybe explain the zazaki etymology of that ethnonym, in this case the medes would have something to do with mines/mining. the proto-hutsul ethnos was surely formed in the maramures region and some bordering north-transilvania areas/northwest-romania where the sigynians sometime between 100-500 AD mixed with the surrounding dacian population & vlahian shepherds, a bit later came the slavic component(tiverians & whitecroats) in their ethnogenesis mainly in the bordering southern ivano-frankivsk/zakarpatia/chirnivcy regions since 600 AD. sigunnians had 2000 years ago surely 2 median identities: the word siguni has to be the same as shuhani, what means one of the main dialects of lur people or northern-luri language, so it's showed their median branch language-identity, but the other identity was the tribe-identity the word that would later become the ethnicon hucul that means they had seen themselfes as belonging to the husi/huzi/huci tribe what is a diactical changing of the word busi, their busae tribe identity. also i think that the meaning "sigyni" can all in all be understood as "people who are originally from a rocky and stony mountainous area or region" cuz if you take a talishi etymology for that then "sygh" is "stone" or if you take the kurdish etymology then "chiya/shah" is "mountain" and "qij" is "rock"......
following words are typical hutsulian & have ties to westiranic median modern descendants' languages: an interessting exclusive huculian word (that is not to be found in ukrainian language) with etymological ties to neo-median(luri/gilaki/balochi/kurdi/behdinani/leki/garmsiri) cause it sounds related to these 2 gilaki words by meaning "hooz"(lake/pond) & "ghut"(immersion/diving) is huculian word "ghuk" and means "waterfall" so connected with watermasses/lake/diving. another exclusive huculian word (not found in ukrainian language) is "kootüga" and means "dog" while in the luri language "katu" & in kurdish "kuti" and "kuchik" is "dog", these words are really close to each other and belong to median dialects from origin. a huculian word (not in ukrainian language again) for "farm-animals/domestic-animals/livestock-animals" is "marga" what you can compare to the luri & gilaki word "morg" for "chicken/hen/rooster" what surely is related together, possibly "marga" is also related to the sorani-kurdish "manga"="cow". then of course the romanian and hutsulian word "branza" & "bryndza" (in the 14th century also as a variation with a ch sound brancha) is translated as "cheese", also often as "cream-cheese", it's a word from the romanian and southwest-ukraine bordering carpathians & many romanian, hutsuls and ukrainians try to find the origins of that word, i searched for the translations of the word cheese in the most languages and no language has a similar word for cheese like branza, so it sure don't came from slavic or romance languages, the only language i found that has similarities with that word is the westiranic balochi word "ponch" for "curd-cheese/quark-cheese/soft white cheese type paste/cream-cheese/cancoillotte/processed cheese", so if you look that in the 14th century the word branza/brynza(commonly variation bronza) had also a ch sound variation, then broncha would be really close to the balochi ponch and has the same meaning, but also important is that it is connected to an other hutsulian word, to "banosh", a traditional dish of hutsul cuisine, a "porridge/grits" cooked in sour cream, both banosh & bryndza are originally from carpathian hutsul region and other neighbouring regions or countries adopted that food, but etymologically both words are westiranic median proto-balochi closest related in origin, "banosh" is a creamy porridge and etymologically identical to balochi "ponch"="quark/cream-cheese/cream-curd/cooked-cheese" cuz i principially see the etymology of ponch & branza & banosh as connected with the meaning cream,mash,curd,yoghurt,porridge,puree,cancoillotte,creamcheese,pesto,paste,gruel,grits,ect. as their roots and not with the meaning real cheese or directly corn groats. a typical ukrainian word what means untypical for the other slavic languages (really possibly borrowed by ukrainians from the carpathian regions where hutsuls live) is the word "gharny"="great" which can be compared to the garmsirian bashkardi word "gohrt"="big" but not so sure about that one, better would be to see the balochi word "shar"="good" as of same origin/roots with the ukrainian "harny/gharny"="great/good/amazing", but the bashkardi word "gohrt" fits really good to the typical ukrainian word "gurt"="group", a group is big so synonymous to the meaning big/large & by the way that word gurt i really think has etymological ties to the ethnonym kurd cuz there are 2 versions explaining the ethnonym of the kurds either with the meaning big collected group/great-group of related tribes/people-group or a more chauvinistic meaning like the big ones/huge and strong people=xurt (of course the most common theories about kurds' ethnonym is that it came from an adopted word from iraq "kard" meaning "nomad" used by arabs and persians for kurds or it came from the name of a mountain range in southeast-turkey "gudi/gurdi/giordi")......
there's another word that is only typical for ukraine "khata"="house" what shares the same origin/meaning like the yazdi-behdinani word "khäda/khda"="house". the hutsulian & ukrainian word "daraba"="raft/float/catamaran/bobber" is generally of westiranic origin (maybe also with some influence or a bit fusion of slavic in that word), it seems that "daraba" is identical to oldpersian "daraya(m)"="river/sea", it's possible that from a mix of slavic "korab"="ship" + westiranic "daraya"="river/sea" resulted "daraba", further a relevant role could play here also kurdish "zorav"="torrent/creek/beck/swollen-stream/raging-current/gush/flush/rapid-brook/mountaintorrent/waterrace/whitewater/fastflowing-stream", on the other hand is in first case "daraba" most likely a combination of 2 westiranic words (like tajiki or persian) "daro"+"aba" and would be understood as the "entering/input/influx/addition/enter/entrance/lead-in/ushering/insertion/interpolation/ingress/entry (for or to) the water" or "dar"+"aba"="given one (for or to) the water", but more possible is the combination of kurdish "dar"="wood/timber/lumber" + "ab"="water" (also romanian "apa"="water" is here possible because it's surely an iranic sigynnian word that came into the proto-romanian language), that would be resulted in "water-wood/water-timber" (in the scence of a water-board), one last possibility is behdinani "dyr"+"aw", what you can understand as "something that's far in the water" or "something for being far in the water" or "something that gets far via the water", i think the more plausible and right etymology of daraba is the kurdish combi variant. the ukrainian and hutsulian "kulish"="thick soup/pottage/millet porridge with meat,mushrooms,tomatoes"(in the carpathian version often the porridge is done from maize) is said to be mostpossibly of hungarian këles origin but alternatively it can be of westiranic median origin when you compare it with (northern) kurdish "keli/kelink"="something simmering/boiling/seething/cooked/scalded/fumed/cookable", that kulish and also köles is of median proto-kurdisch dialect origin can proof the word-meaning if you compare it with some other indoeuropean languages' meaning of the words millet & grits and related words to millet like germanic hirse, gries & grütze/grits or slavic grechka, these words have originally the meaning "made warm" so very close to kurdish "keli" by meaning, but etymologically kulish and köles are very close to "keli" or "kelink" (that dish have to be originally from southwest-ukraine/northwest-romania so some hungarians have lived in the western border-near zone there in some times). an ukrainian verb that came at least 1000 years ago from southwest-ukraine/north-romania into the language is "shanuvati"(-vati=verb-ending)="beeing a fan/admirer/liker/follower/honourer/lover/appreciator of someone" and has roots in iran, it's identical to persian "jan"="dear/liked/adored/favoured one" & "soul" but in older persian 2000 years ago it sounded like "hyan", the kurdish equivalent is "chan" and "chänik", in ukrainian dictionary "shana" is translated as "the feeling of being esteemed", also the romanian word "chinsti"="to honour/esteem/appreciate/adore/value/respect" proofs that the original word was from carpathia & north-romania (because you can see the -sti is a word-ending and that word is surely not of a romance language origin and also fit well together chinsti with kurdish chänik, oldpersian hyan & ukrainian shana), the germany/poland-theory about that word is not sure. in western-ukraine is sometimes used the dialectical word "chugha"="ungrown mountain", it's related either to gilaki "quh"="mountain" or talishi "sygh"="stone" (taleshi and gilaki are neighbour-languages from northwest iran) or kudish "chiya"(sometimes also "shax")="mountain" (in zazaki is "koyan"="mountain") or kurdish "qyj/qysh"="rock", but that talishi word "sygh" is of the same origin and close in meaning related to another word, to hutsulian "chughilo"(-ilo is an noun-ending with adjective character)="notch or indentation in a stone" and "flowstone", both ("sygh" & "chugh-") have actually the meaning "stone", they are similar so hutsulian "chughilo" is of median talishi-alike (atropatena-media) dialect origin, but also of proto-kurdish origin because there's a kurdish word "qax"="indentation in a stone or rock", it is even much closer in the meaning to "chughilo" than the talishi word......
another hutsulian word is "dyadühna"(-na is an adjective ending but it's an noun)="fever", there's a possibility that it's of westiranic median origin because it could be identical to balochi "thäf"="fever" or kurdish "tehn"="temperature/warmness" or on the other side it can be related to kurdish "därd"="illness" (if you see -ühna as a word-ending). the typical ukrainian or hutsulian word "gudzica"="button" came really sure from median laki and zazaki alike dialects, you can compare "gudzica" with zazaki "gozage"="button" & laki "gijik"="button". hutsulian word "galica" for "snake/serpent" could be identical with the persian meaning and etymology "lair/den/hideaway/animal-hideout/animal's burrow/animal's construction/animal's safehouse/slip-angle/hidey-hole/shelter/bolthole/loophole/something recessed/silt/alluvial sand/quicksand/shifting-sands/drift-sand/fluidized sand/flowing or running ground/seepage/ooze/percolation/something seeping/something slicky/mud" and is called "gel" in persian, that word has a characteristical connection to hutsulian "galica" because a snake has a behaviour/comportment/nature/character/attributes/properties/features/peculiarities/appearence/look that fits to persian "gel" like for example in the scence of behavior or character 'wriggling/sliding/gliding/crawling/burrowing/seeping into or under something (like sand or soft earth or a hole or somewhere else)' and also are many snake-kinds known for 'having a coloured camouflage', a snake is 'often in a hideout' so another word the kurdish "hilan"="hidden/preserved" have to be also related to it, or in the scence of appearence/look & palpation/tactuality but also style of the motion/agility/movement 'slick/slippery/smooth/slushy/squidgy/supple/sleek/slippy/slithery', so -ica in "galica" is a later slavic female noun-ending that was combined with "gal-" what is related (via sigynnian language intermixing in the east-carpathians) to persian "gel" and really possible kurdish "hilan" (verb "hilanin"="to hide oneself from someone"), maybe also relevant could be here for seeing better the whole spectrum to mention the mazandarani "gäl"="soil" and balochi "kel"="hole". the last word is huculian "bardka" for "axe" while in the "modern-zoroastrian" behdinani/gabri language (spoken by the behdinan people in yazdi dialect) "barda" is translated as "spade"(including spade-chissel?), they are surely of media kingdom origin related words.
Duje faino.