Sak, sack ....
The Türkic "honor, store"....and all the derivatives of the "store"
The extant Dictionary definitions of sak/sack etc
1 n. - sack (n.1) "large bag," O.E. sacc (W.Saxon), sec (Mercian), sæc (Old
Kentish) "large cloth bag," also "sackcloth," from P.Gmc. *sakkiz (cf. M.Du. sak,
O.H.G. sac, O.N. sekkr, but Goth. sakkus probably is directly from Gk.), an
early borrowing from L. saccus (cf. O.Fr. sac, Sp. saco, It. sacco), from Gk.
sakkos, from Semitic (cf. Heb. saq "sack"). The wide spread of the word is
probably due to the story of Joseph. (The real Türkic source, or at least the
Etruscan
borrowing is not mentioned out of sheer modesty, or not to burden the tired
reader with superfluous details, I guess. Tell them, instead, a sweet story about
Joseph.)
2 n. - etc.............