یاد
Khalaj
Ottoman Turkish
Etymology 1
From Common Turkic *yāt (“alien, foreign, unfamiliar”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /jad/
Descendants
- Turkish: yad
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /jaːd/
Descendants
- Turkish: yâd
Persian
Etymology
From Middle Persian [Term?] (/ayād/), from Proto-Iranian *Habí- + *yáH- (probably from Proto-Indo-European *yeh₂- (“to go; to go in, to enter”), with Iranian semantic shift "to enter [the mind]" > "to remember"). Compare Tocharian A [Term?] (opyāc, “in remembrance”), probably borrowed from an Eastern Iranian language.
Pronunciation
- (Classical Persian) IPA(key): [jɑːð]
- (Dari, formal) IPA(key): [jɑːd̪]
- (Kabuli) IPA(key): [jɑːd̪]
- (Hazaragi) IPA(key): [jɔːd̪̥]
- (Iran, formal) IPA(key): [jɒːd̪̥]
- (Tajik, formal) IPA(key): [jɔd̪]
Readings | |
---|---|
Classical reading? | yāḏ |
Dari reading? | yād |
Iranian reading? | yâd |
Tajik reading? | yod |
Noun
Dari | یاد |
---|---|
Iranian Persian | |
Tajik | ёд |
یاد • (yâd)
- memory
- Synonym: حافظه (hâfeze)
- c. 1390, Shams-ud-Dīn Muḥammad Ḥāfiẓ, “Ghazal 11”, in دیوان حافظ [The Divān of Ḥāfiẓ]:
- گو نام ما ز یاد به عمداً چه میبری
خود آید آن که یاد نیاری ز نام ما- gû nâm-i mâ zi yâd ba amdan či mê-barî
xwad âyad ân ki yâd nay-ârî zi nâm-i mâ - Say, why do you purposely forget my name?
The [time] shall come by itself that you do not remember my name.
- gû nâm-i mâ zi yâd ba amdan či mê-barî
Related terms
verbal phrases
- از یاد بردن (az yâd bordan, “to forget; to cause to forget”, literally “to take away from memory”)
- از یاد رفتن (az yâd raftan, “to be forgotten”, literally “to go from memory”)
- به یاد آوردن (be yâd âvordan, “to recall; to remind”, literally “to bring to memory”)
- به یاد افتادن (be yâd oftâdan, “to remember”, literally “to fall to memory”)
- به یاد انداختن (be yâd andâxtan, “to remind”, literally “to throw to memory”)
- به یاد داشتن (be yâd dâštan, “to remember”, literally “to have in memory”)
- به یاد سپردن (be yâd sepordan, “to memorize”, literally “to entrust to memory”)
- به یاد ماندن (be yâd mândan, “to be remembered; to have in memory”, literally “to stay in memory”)
- یاد دادن (yâd dâdan, “to teach”, literally “to give memory”)
- یاد داشتن (yâd dâštan, “to remember; (Afghanistan) to know how to”, literally “to have in memory”)
- یاد رفتن (yâd raftan, “to be forgotten”, literally “to go from memory”)
- یاد کردن (yâd kardan, “to mention; to reminesce”, literally “to make memory”)
- یاد گرفتن (yâd gereftan, “to learn”, literally “to take memory”)
others
Descendants
- → Assamese: ইয়াদ (iad)
- → Azerbaijani: yad
- → Baluchi: یات (yát)
- → Bengali: ইয়াদ (iẏad)
- → Chagatai: یاد (yād)
- → Gujarati: યાદી (yādī), યાદ (yād)
- → Hindustani: yād
- → Kannada: ಯಾದಿ (yādi)
- → Kazakh: жад (jad)
- → Khalaj: yâd
- → Maithili: iād, iādi
- Devanagari script: इआद, इआदि
- Tirhuta script: 𑒃𑒂𑒠, 𑒃𑒂𑒠𑒱
- → Marathi: यादी (yādī)
- → Marwari: याद (yād)
- → Old Punjabi: ਯਾਦਿ (yādi)
- Punjabi: yād
- Gurmukhi script: ਯਾਦ
- Shahmukhi script: یاد
- Punjabi: yād
- → Ottoman Turkish: یاد (yâd)
- Turkish: yâd
- → Pashto: ياد (yād)
- → Sindhi: yādi
- Arabic script: يادِ
- Devanagari script: यादि
Further reading
- Vullers, Johann August (1856–1864) “یاد”, in Lexicon Persico-Latinum etymologicum cum linguis maxime cognatis Sanscrita et Zendica et Pehlevica comparatum, e lexicis persice scriptis Borhâni Qâtiu, Haft Qulzum et Bahâri agam et persico-turcico Farhangi-Shuûrî confectum, adhibitis etiam Castelli, Meninski, Richardson et aliorum operibus et auctoritate scriptorum Persicorum adauctum (in Latin), volume II, Gießen: J. Ricker, pages 1499a–1500b
- MacKenzie, D. N. (1971) “ayād”, in A concise Pahlavi dictionary, London, New York, Toronto: Oxford University Press, page 15
- Cheung, Johnny (2007) “*HiaH”, in Etymological Dictionary of the Iranian Verb (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 2), Leiden, Boston: Brill, →ISBN, page 175
Urdu
Etymology
From Classical Persian یاد (yād).
Pronunciation
- (Standard Urdu) IPA(key): /jɑːd̪/
Audio (PK) (file) - Rhymes: -ɑːd̪
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