შარავანდი
Appearance
Georgian
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Old Georgian შარავანდი (šaravandi).
Noun
[edit]შარავანდი • (šaravandi) (plural შარავანდები)
References
[edit]- Rayfield, Donald, editor (2006), “შარავანდი”, in A Comprehensive Georgian–English Dictionary[1], London: Garnett Press
Old Georgian
[edit]Etymology
[edit]An Iranian borrowing. See Old Armenian աշխարաւանդ (ašxarawand) for more.
Noun
[edit]შარავანდი • (šaravandi)
Derived terms
[edit]- შარავანდედი (šaravandedi)
- შარავანდედება (šaravandedeba)
- შარავანდედობა (šaravandedoba)
- შარავანდდადგმულ (šaravanddadgmul)
- შარავანდის შებმა (šaravandis šebma)
Descendants
[edit]- Georgian: შარავანდი (šaravandi)
References
[edit]- Abulaʒe, Ilia (1973) “შარავანდი”, in Ʒveli kartuli enis leksiḳoni (masalebi) [Dictionary of Old Georgian (Materials)][2] (in Georgian), Tbilisi: Metsniereba, page 471
- Abulaʒe, Ilia (2014) “შარავანდი”, in Ʒvelkartuli-ʒvelsomxuri doḳumenṭirebuli leksiḳoni [Old Georgian – Old Armenian Documentary Dictionary], Tbilisi: National Centre of Manuscripts, →ISBN, page 786a
- Androniḳašvili, Mzia (1966) Narḳvevebi iranul-kartuli enobrivi urtiertobidan I [Studies in Iranian–Georgian Linguistic Contacts I] (in Georgian), Tbilisi: Tbilisi University Press, pages 205, 212, 215, 396, 398, deriving from Middle Persian *šahrāvand
- Rapp, Stephen H. (2001) “From Bumberazi to Basileus: Writing Cultural Synthesis and Dynastic Change in Medieval Georgia (K‛art‛li)”, in Antony Eastmond, editor, Eastern Approaches to Byzantium (Society for the Promotion of Byzantine Studies Publications; 9), Ashgate Publishing, pages 115–116
- Rapp, Stephen H. (2014) The Sasanian World through Georgian Eyes: Caucasia and the Iranian Commonwealth in Late Antique Georgian Literature, Ashgate Publishing, pages 357–358
- Rayfield, Donald, editor (2006), “შარავანდი”, in A Comprehensive Georgian–English Dictionary[3], London: Garnett Press