یعنی

Persian

Etymology

From Arabic يَعْنِي (yaʕnī).

Pronunciation

 
  • (Dari, formal) IPA(key): [jäʔ.niː]
    • (Kabuli) IPA(key): [jɑː.niː]
    • (Hazaragi) IPA(key): [jɔː.ni]

Readings
Classical reading? ya'nī
Dari reading? ya'nī
Iranian reading? ya'ni
Tajik reading? yaʾni

Verb

یعنی • (ya'ni)

  1. (transitive) [he/she/it] means

Interjection

یعنی • (ya'ni)

  1. (adverbial, conjunctive, prepositional, or adjectival) in other words, actually, namely, to wit, kind of, somewhat, id est, that is, meaning, you know
    • c. 1004–1088, Nasir Khusraw, سفرنامه [Safarnama], modern edition:
      ... و از آنجا به شهر حمات شدیم، شهری خوشی و آبادان بر لب آب عاصی و این آب را از آن سبب عاصی گویند که به جانب روم می‌رود، یعنی، چون از بلاد اسلام به بلاد کفر می‌رود، عاصی است
      ... va az ânjâ be šahr-e Hamât šodim, šahri xoš o âbâdân bar lab-e Âb-e Âsi va in âb râ az ân sabab "Âsi" guyand ke be jâneb-e Rum mi-ravad, ya'ni, chun az belâd Eslam be belâd-e kofr mi-ravad, âsi ast
      ... and from there we went to the city of Hama, a pleasant and cultivated place near the Âsi [Sinful] River and this river is called "Sinful" because it is flowing toward Rum [the Byzantine Empire], that is to say, since it is going from the land of Islam to the land of kufr, it is sinful
  2. (filler) er, so, uh, well

Anagrams

Urdu

Etymology

Ultimately from Arabic يَعْنِي (yaʕnī).

Pronunciation

  • (Standard Urdu) IPA(key): /jɑː.niː/
  • (file)
  • Rhymes: -iː

Conjunction

یَعْنی • (yā'nī) (Hindi spelling यानी)

  1. (transitive) [he/she/it] means

Interjection

یَعْنی • (yā'nī) (Hindi spelling यानी)

  1. in other words, meaning
  2. namely, that is
  3. like
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