मुहर
Appearance
Hindi
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Borrowed from Classical Persian مهر (muhr), from Middle Persian mwdl (muhr).
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]मुहर • (muhar) f (Urdu spelling مہر)
- stamp, seal
- gold coin, doubloon
- हमें मुहरों से भरा कलसा मिला।
- hamẽ muhrõ se bharā kalsā milā.
- We found a vase full of doubloons.
- 1880–1936, प्रेमचंद, आत्माराम[1]:
- उसने कुछ मोहर कमर में बाँधीं, फिर एक सूखी लकड़ी से जमीन की मिट्टी हटा कर कई गड्ढे बनाये, उन्हें मोहरों से भर कर मिट्टी से ढँक दिया।
- usne kuch mohar kamar mẽ bāndhī̃, phir ek sūkhī lakṛī se jamīn kī miṭṭī haṭā kar kaī gaḍḍhe banāye, unhẽ mohrõ se bhar kar miṭṭī se ḍhãk diyā.
- He tied some coins to his waist, and then used a dry stick to clear the dirt from the ground to make some ditches, which he filled with coins and covered with dirt.
Declension
[edit]Declension of मुहर (fem cons-stem)
Alternative forms
[edit]- मोहर (mohar)
References
[edit]- McGregor, Ronald Stuart (1993) “मुहर”, in The Oxford Hindi-English Dictionary, London: Oxford University Press
- Bahri, Hardev (1989) “मुहर”, in Siksarthi Hindi-Angrejhi Sabdakosa [Learners' Hindi-English Dictionary], Delhi: Rajpal & Sons.