See also: أما and آما

Brahui

edit

Etymology

edit

Inherited from Proto-Dravidian *amma (mother).

Noun

edit

اَمّا (ammā)

  1. mother, grandmother
  2. (occasionally) sister, daughter
  3. respectful term of address to any woman

References

edit
  • Bray, Denys (1934) “ammā”, in The Brahui Language[1], Calcutta, India: Superintendent Government Printing, Part II: The Brāhūī Problem; Part III: Etymological Vocabulary, page 53
  • Burrow, T., Emeneau, M. B. (1984) “183”, in A Dravidian etymological dictionary, 2nd edition, Oxford University Press, →ISBN.

Khalaj

edit

Conjunction

edit

اَمّا (əmmâ)

  1. Arabic spelling of əmmâ (but)

Mazanderani

edit

Pronoun

edit

اما (emâ)

  1. we

Persian

edit

Etymology

edit

From Arabic أَمَّا (ʔammā).

Pronunciation

edit
 

Readings
Classical reading? ammā
Dari reading? ammā
Iranian reading? ammâ
Tajik reading? ammo

Conjunction

edit
Dari اما
Iranian Persian ولی
Tajik аммо

امّا (ammâ)

  1. but
  2. however

See also

edit

Urdu

edit

Etymology 1

edit

Borrowed from Classical Persian اما (ammā), from Arabic أَمَّا (ʔammā).

Conjunction

edit

اَمّا (ammā) (Hindi spelling अम्मा)

  1. but
  2. moreover
  3. nevertheless
  4. yet
  5. however

Etymology 2

edit

Inherited from Sauraseni Prakrit 𑀅𑀁𑀫𑀸 (aṃmā), from Sanskrit अम्बा (ambā).

Alternative forms

edit

Noun

edit

اَمّا (ammāf (Hindi spelling अम्मा)

  1. (informal) mother; mom, mum
    Synonyms: ماں (mā̃), (formal) مادَر (mādar), (formal) والِدَہ (vālida)
    Coordinate term: اَبّا (abbā)
Derived terms
edit

Etymology 3

edit

Borrowed from Sanskrit उमा (umā).

Noun

edit

اُما (umāf (Hindi spelling उमा)

  1. flax
  2. linseed
  3. light
  4. splendor
  5. fame
  6. reputation
  7. night
  8. tranquility
  NODES
Note 1