زاده
Persian
Etymology
From Middle Persian zʾtk' (zādag), from Old Persian *𐏀𐎠𐎫 (*zāta), from Proto-Indo-Iranian *ȷ́aHtás, from Proto-Indo-European *ǵn̥h₁tós. Indo-Iranian cognates include Sanskrit जात (jātá), Marathi झाले (jhāle), Northern Kurdish -za, Central Kurdish ـزا (za) and Avestan 𐬰𐬁𐬙𐬀 (zāta), other cognates include Latin gnātus, nātus, Old English -cund. Not a cognate with German Saat.
Pronunciation
- (Classical Persian) IPA(key): [zɑː.ˈða]
- (Dari, formal) IPA(key): [zɑː.d̪ǽ]
- (Kabuli) IPA(key): [zɑː.d̪ǽ]
- (Hazaragi) IPA(key): [zɔː.d̪ǽ]
- (Iran, formal) IPA(key): [zɒː.d̪é]
- (Tajik, formal) IPA(key): [zɔ.d̪ǽ]
Readings | |
---|---|
Classical reading? | zāḏa |
Dari reading? | zāda |
Iranian reading? | zâde |
Tajik reading? | zoda |
Inflection
Possessive forms of زاده (zâde) | ||
---|---|---|
singular | plural | |
1st person singular (“my”) |
زادهام (zâdé-am) [Term?] △ (zâdám) |
زادگانم (zâdegấnam) [Term?] △ (zâdeấm) |
2nd person singular (“your”) |
زادهات (zâdé-at) [Term?] △ (zâdát) |
زادگانت (zâdegấnat) [Term?] △ (zâdeất) |
3rd person singular (“his, her, its”) |
زادهاش (zâdéaš) [Term?] △ (zâdáš) |
زادگانش (zâdegấnaš) [Term?] △ (zâdeấš) |
1st plural (“our”) |
زادهمان (zâdé-mân) [Term?] △ (zâdámun) |
زادگانمان (zâdegấnemân) [Term?] △ (zâdeấmun) |
2nd plural (“your”) |
زادهتان (zâdé-tân) [Term?] △ (zâdátun) |
زادگانتان (zâdegấnetân) [Term?] △ (zâdeấtun) |
3rd plural (“their”) |
زادهشان (zâdé-šân) [Term?] △ (zâdášun) |
زادگانشان (zâdegấnešân) [Term?] △ (zâdeấšun) |
△ Colloquial. |
Suffix
ـزاده • (-zâde)
- a suffix forming surnames
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