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π•šπ”Όπ•Œπ•’π•Ž π•—π”΄π•œπ•™π•’π•š

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

Aghwan

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Etymology

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π•šπ”Όπ•Œπ•’π•Ž (simon, β€œSimon”) +‎ π•—π”΄π•œπ•™π•’π•š (αΉ—eαΉ­ros, β€œPeter”)

Proper noun

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π•šπ”Όπ•Œπ•’π•Ž π•—π”΄π•œπ•™π•’π•š (simon αΉ—eαΉ­ros)

  1. (biblical) Simon Peter
    • Bible John.21,11:
      π”±π”°π•†π”°π”±π•ˆπ•†π”Άπ•Žπ”΄ π•šπ”Όπ•Œπ•’π•Ž π•—π”΄π•œπ•™π•’π•š π•‡π•’π•Œπ•’π”Άπ•Žπ•’π”΄π•Ž 𐔴 𐔴𐔸 𐕍𐔰𐕙𐔼𐔰
      bahabΓ₯hΔ“ne simon αΉ—eαΉ­ros xΜ£ompΔ“noen e et qΜ‡aria
      Simon Peter went inside, dragged the net on the land

Synonyms

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Further reading

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  • Gippert J., Schulze W., Aleksidze Z., MahΓ© J.-P., editors (2009), The Caucasian Albanian Palimpsests of Mount Sinai (Monumenta Palaeographica Medii Aevi: Series Ibero-Caucasica; 2), volume 1, Turnhout: Brepols, β†’ISBN, page II-53
  • Gippert, Jost (2018) β€œWhen person overcomes class. The case of Caucasian Albanian”, in Eugen Hill, Martin KΓΌmmel, Stefan Schumacher, editors, International Journal of Diachronic Linguistics and Linguistic Reconstruction[1], volume 15, MΓΌnchen: Verlag Anja Urbanek, pages 25-43