شێت
Central Kurdish
editEtymology
editFrom Aramaic שידא (šēḏā) or Classical Syriac ܫܐܕܐ (šēḏā, “demon”), whence Middle Persian [script needed] (šēdā, “bliss”) and Persian شیدا (šeydâ). Ultimately from Akkadian 𒀭𒆘 (šēdum, “a protective deity”). For the semantic shift, compare Arabic مَجْنُون (majnūn, “mad, crazy, insane”), which is from جِنّ (jinn, “demon”).
Pronunciation
editAdjective
editNorthern Kurdish | şêt |
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شێت (şêt)
Noun
editشێت (şêt)
Synonyms
edit- دێوانە (dêwane)
References
edit- îbrahîmpûr, muḧemedteqî (2008) “شێت”, in ferhengî kurdî-înglîzî [Kurdish–English Dictionary], Tehran: suha, page 703
- Thackston, W. M. (2006) “shet”, in Sorani Kurdish: A Reference Grammar with Selected Readings, Lecture Notes, Iranian Studies, Harvard University, page 226
- Wahby, T., Edmonds, C. J. (1966) “shêt”, in A Kurdish-English Dictionary, page 138
- Qazzaz, Shafiq (2000) “شێت”, in The Sharezoor Kurdish–English dictionary, Erbil: Aras Press and Publishers, page 386
Categories:
- Central Kurdish terms borrowed from Aramaic
- Central Kurdish terms derived from Aramaic
- Central Kurdish terms borrowed from Classical Syriac
- Central Kurdish terms derived from Classical Syriac
- Central Kurdish terms derived from Akkadian
- Central Kurdish terms with IPA pronunciation
- Central Kurdish lemmas
- Central Kurdish adjectives
- Central Kurdish nouns