پاشا
Mazanderani
Ottoman Turkish
Alternative forms
- باشه (başa)
Etymology
From باش (baş, “head”) + آغا (ağa, “master”), or from Persian پادشاه (pâdšâh, “padishah, king”).[1] Compare the obsolete forms باش آغا/باشه[2] and Kazakh басеке (baseke, “master, leader”) for semantic development.
Derived terms
- پاشالق (paşalık)
Descendants
- Turkish: paşa
- → Arabic: بَاشَا (bāšā)
- → English: pasha
- → French: pacha
- → German: Pascha
- → Greek: πασάς (pasás)
- → Hungarian: pasa
- → Italian: pascià
- → Kazakh: паша (paşa)
- → Macedonian: паша (paša)
- → Middle Armenian: փաշայ (pʻašay)
- Armenian: փաշա (pʻaša)
- → Persian: پاشا (pâšâ)
- → Polish: pasza
- → Portuguese: paxá
- → Russian: паша́ (pašá)
- → Serbo-Croatian:
- → Spanish: pachá, bajá
- → Tatar: паша (paşa)
- → Ukrainian: паша́ (pašá)
- → Uzbek: posho
- → Yiddish: פּאַשאַ (pasha)
References
- Oxford English Dictionary, s.v. "pasha".
- Redhouse, James W. (1890) “پاشا”, in A Turkish and English Lexicon, Constantinople: A. H. Boyajian, page 326
- https://books.google.com/books?id=H5VFAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA253
- Redhouse, James W. (1890) “پاشا”, in A Turkish and English Lexicon, Constantinople: A. H. Boyajian, page 434
Uyghur
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