دیه
Bakhtiari
Etymology
From Persian دیگه (dige), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *dwóh₁ (“two”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /diye/
Mozarabic
Alternative forms
- دي (diyya)
Etymology
Inherited from Vulgar Latin *dia, first-declension reshaping of Classical Latin diēs.
Noun
دیه (diyya) m
- day
- c. 1100, al-Aʕmā al-Tuṭīlī, Kharja A22 :[1]
- الب ديه اشت ديه / دي ذا العنصر حقا
- albə diyya əštə diyya / diyya ḏā l-ʿanṣara ḥaqqa
- What a white day is today, Saint John's day!
- (literally, “White day this day, the day of Ansara!”)
- الب ديه اشت ديه / دي ذا العنصر حقا
References
- Jones, Alan (1988) Romance Kharjas in Andalusian Arabic Muwaššaḥ Poetry (Oxford Oriental Institute Monographs; 9), Ithaca Press London, →ISBN, pages 162-164
Persian
Alternative forms
- دیت (diyat)
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