devale

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English

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Etymology

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From Sinhalese දේවාලය (dēwālaya), from Sanskrit देवालय (devālaya).

Noun

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devale (plural devales)

  1. A Hindu temple in Sri Lanka.
    • 1972, Hans Dieter Evers, Monks, Priests and Peasants: A Study of Buddhism and Social Structure in Central Ceylon:
      Both the Maligava and the devales are administered by chief temple officials and their deputies, the services during the festival from providing supplies and decorations to participation in the processions are performed by temple tenants who hold temple lands (vihāragam and dēvālagam) in lieu of their rājakāriya (lit. "king's work," in this case temple service).
    • 1992, Piya Tan, Buddhist currents: a brief social analysis of Buddhism in Sri Lanka and Siam, →OCLC:
      Worshippers at the devale would hand over a small offering of betel and incense sticks to the kapurala and tell him their problems.

Anagrams

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Galician

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Verb

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devale

  1. inflection of devalar:
    1. first/third-person singular present subjunctive
    2. third-person singular imperative

Romanian

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Etymology

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From de +‎ vale.

Adverb

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devale

  1. down the valley