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Beshka
Location
Country Ukraine
Oblast Kirovohrad
Physical characteristics
Source 
 • location Sokil'nyky
 • coordinates 48°40′11″N 32°37′57″E / 48.66972°N 32.63250°E / 48.66972; 32.63250
 • elevation150 m
Mouth Inhulets
 • coordinates
48°30′37″N 33°09′37″E / 48.51028°N 33.16028°E / 48.51028; 33.16028
Basin size56 km
Basin features
Progression Inhulets

Beshka ( Ukrainian: Бешка) is a river in Kirovohrad Oblast, Ukraine. It is a tributary of the Inhulets. [1]

The name of the river comes from Turkish bes or beş, a word meaning "five", or in a religious context, "God given plurality", with the suffix kaja, literally "rock". The town Pyatykhatky has a similar origin in Turkish cultural influence. [2]

It begins near the village of Sokil'nyky, flows to the southeast through the villages of Volodymyrivka, Moshoryne, Svitlopil, the town of Nova Praha and flows into the Inhulets within the village of Novy Starodub.[ citation needed]

References

  1. ^ Словник гідронімів України (PDF) (in Ukrainian). Academy of Sciences of the Soviet Union. 1979. p. 47.
  2. ^ Лучик, Василь B. (2015-12-31). "Turkisms in the toponymy of Ukraine: historical and etymological aspects". Linguistica (in Ukrainian). 55 (1): 251–262. doi: 10.4312/linguistica.55.1.251-262. ISSN  2350-420X.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Beshka
Location
Country Ukraine
Oblast Kirovohrad
Physical characteristics
Source 
 • location Sokil'nyky
 • coordinates 48°40′11″N 32°37′57″E / 48.66972°N 32.63250°E / 48.66972; 32.63250
 • elevation150 m
Mouth Inhulets
 • coordinates
48°30′37″N 33°09′37″E / 48.51028°N 33.16028°E / 48.51028; 33.16028
Basin size56 km
Basin features
Progression Inhulets

Beshka ( Ukrainian: Бешка) is a river in Kirovohrad Oblast, Ukraine. It is a tributary of the Inhulets. [1]

The name of the river comes from Turkish bes or beş, a word meaning "five", or in a religious context, "God given plurality", with the suffix kaja, literally "rock". The town Pyatykhatky has a similar origin in Turkish cultural influence. [2]

It begins near the village of Sokil'nyky, flows to the southeast through the villages of Volodymyrivka, Moshoryne, Svitlopil, the town of Nova Praha and flows into the Inhulets within the village of Novy Starodub.[ citation needed]

References

  1. ^ Словник гідронімів України (PDF) (in Ukrainian). Academy of Sciences of the Soviet Union. 1979. p. 47.
  2. ^ Лучик, Василь B. (2015-12-31). "Turkisms in the toponymy of Ukraine: historical and etymological aspects". Linguistica (in Ukrainian). 55 (1): 251–262. doi: 10.4312/linguistica.55.1.251-262. ISSN  2350-420X.

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