یاقوت
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See also: ياقوت
Persian
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Borrowed from Arabic يَاقُوت (yāqūt), ultimately from Ancient Greek ὑάκινθος (huákinthos). Doublet of یاکند (yâkand).
Pronunciation
[edit]- (Classical Persian) IPA(key): [jɑː.quːt]
- (Iran, formal) IPA(key): [jɒː.ʁuːt̪]
- (Tajik, formal) IPA(key): [jɔ.qut̪]
Readings | |
---|---|
Classical reading? | yāqūt |
Dari reading? | yāqūt |
Iranian reading? | yâğut |
Tajik reading? | yoqut |
Noun
[edit]Dari | یاقوت |
---|---|
Iranian Persian | |
Tajik | ёқут |
یاقوت • (yâqut) (plural یاقوتها (yâqut-hâ))
Derived terms
[edit]- یاقوتِ سُرخ (yâqut-e sorx)
- یاقوتِ کَبود (yâqut-e kabud)
- یاقوتِستان (yâqutestân)
Descendants
[edit]Proper noun
[edit]یاقوت • (yâqut)
- Yāqūt al-Mustaʿṣimī, thirteenth-century master calligrapher; (poetic) metaphor for a master calligrapher.
- c. 1520, Selim I of the Ottoman Empire, edited by Benedek Péri, The Persian Dīvān of Yavuz Sulṭān Selīm, Budapest, Hungary: Research Centre for the Humanities, Eötvös Loránd Research Network, →ISBN, page 112:
- چو خط که از لب لعلت دمد رقم نتوان کرد
اگر شوند چو یاقوت قدسیان همه کاتب- čū xatt ki az lab-i la'lat damad raqam natawān kard
agar šawand čū yāqūt-i qudsiyān hama kātib - When the line of hair blooms from your ruby lips, it cannot be written down
Even were all the scribes to become like the Yāqūt of the angels.
- čū xatt ki az lab-i la'lat damad raqam natawān kard
Further reading
[edit]- Hayyim, Sulayman (1934) “یاقوت”, in New Persian–English dictionary, Teheran: Librairie-imprimerie Béroukhim
Urdu
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Borrowed from Classical Persian یاقوت (yāqūt), from Arabic, ultimately from Ancient Greek ὑάκινθος (huákinthos).
Noun
[edit]یاقوت • (yāqūt) m (Hindi spelling याक़ूत)
Related terms
[edit]- یاقوتی (yāqūtī)
Categories:
- Persian terms borrowed from Arabic
- Persian terms derived from Arabic
- Persian terms derived from Ancient Greek
- Persian doublets
- Persian terms with IPA pronunciation
- Persian lemmas
- Persian nouns
- Persian proper nouns
- Persian poetic terms
- Persian terms with quotations
- fa:Gems
- Urdu terms borrowed from Classical Persian
- Urdu terms derived from Classical Persian
- Urdu terms derived from Ancient Greek
- Urdu lemmas
- Urdu nouns
- Urdu masculine nouns
- ur:Gems