From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Proto-Indo-Iranian *ȷ́ā́mātā.
*jā́mātā m
- son-in-law
- Central Iranian:
- Northeastern Iranian:
- Sogdian: (/zāmātē/) (> *zāmātar-akah)
- Manichaean script: 𐫉𐫀𐫖𐫤𐫀𐫏 (zʾmtʾy)
- Syriac script: ܢܐܩܬܐܝ (zʾmtʾy)
- Southeastern Iranian:
- Proto-Pathan:
- Pashto: زوم (zum)
- Waneci: زوم (zōm)
- Sanglechi: زنوذ (zənūδ)
- Yidgha: زمے (zamai)
- Northwestern Iranian:
- Baluchi: زامات (zāmāt)
- Kurdish:
- Northern Kurdish: zava
- Central Kurdish: زاوا (zawa)
- Southern Kurdish: زاوا (zawa)
- Laki: زوما (zuma)
- Medo-Parthian:
- Caspian:
- Gilaki: زاما (zāmā)
- Old Mazanderani: زوما (zōmā)
- Mazanderani: زاما (zāmā), زما (zëmā)
- Old Median: *zāmātar
- Middle Median: *zāmātad
- Kermanic: zāmā (Ashtiani)
- Old Azari: *زاماد (zāmād)
- Talysh: (/zāmā/)
- Arabic script: زاما
- Latin script: zama
- Vafsi: زاوا (zāvā)
- Semnani: زوما (zumā)
- Parthian: 𐫉𐫀𐫖𐫀𐫅 (zʾmʾd /zāmād/)
- Zaza-Gurani:
- Southwestern Iranian:
- Middle Persian: (/dāmād/)
- Manichaean script: 𐫅𐫀𐫖𐫀𐫅 (dʾmʾd)
- Book Pahlavi script: [Book Pahlavi needed] (dʾmʾt')
- Classical Persian: داماد (dāmād)
- Iranian Persian: داماد (dâmâd)
- Northern Luri: دۋما (dümā)
- Tajik: домод (domod)
- → Alviri-Vidari: دماد (domād)
- → Hindi: दामाद (dāmād)
- → Ottoman Turkish: داماد (dâmâd)
- → Sylheti: ꠖꠣꠝꠣꠘ (daman)